10
| LIFE CENTRAL MICHIGAN Midori sushi, martini bar opens today after year and a half of renovations, 3 Central Michigan University Friday, Oct. 21, 2011 [cm-life.com] 93 Years of Serving as Central Michigan University’s Independent Voice PHOTOS BY VICTORIA ZEGLER/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER Oil City resident and raptor biologist Joe Roger, co-owner of the Wildlife Recovery Association in Shepherd, shows members of the audience their snow owl Snowy Thursday night during the Live Raptor Show in Anspach 162. The event was hosted by the Central Michigan University Wildlife Society who teams up with the association every year helping with tasks such as trimming beaks and talons, painting cages and feeding the birds. raptors on campus Wildlife Society hosts birds of prey presentation By Matt Thompson Assistant Sports Editor The University of Michigan will pay Central Michigan Uni- versity $850,000 to come to Ann Arbor to play football on Aug. 31, 2013. The contract states CMU will also be given 450 tickets to the game according to information Central Michigan Life gathered from filing a Freedom of Infor- mation Act. This was the second non- conference game scheduled for 2013. CMU is also traveling to North Carolina State two weeks after going to U-M. The Chippewas will make $250,000 from that game. The to- tal is low because the N.C. State Wolfpack is coming to Kelly/ Shorts Stadium in 2014. CMU Athletic Director Dave Heeke said traveling to Georgia in 2008 was the biggest contract, where the Chippewas made $875,000. This would be the sec- ond-highest compensation, but the net gain might be greater by not having to travel and stay in Georgia. The Chippewas are 0-3 against U-M. The last time CMU played at Michigan Stadium was in 2006 and the Chippewas lost 41-17. This was when U-M was ranked 10th in the country. The $850,000 is considerably larger than the $500,000 Michi- gan State University paid CMU to come this fall. “Large schools are able to pay more out,” Heeke said in a pre- vious interview. “Michigan will make $5 million on an average football Saturday. That’s why they’re able to pay visiting teams that they’re favored to win. The more competitive the game, the lower the price.” Heeke also said on the best day; CMU will make $300,000 on a home game. The 450 tickets is more than the 400 tickets MSU gave, but the Spartans gave CMU the option of purchasing another 5,000. U-M will have until Feb. 1, 2014 to pay CMU. [email protected] Michigan to pay CMU $850,000 for 2013 FOOTBALL PAYDAYS Past and present funds from football games Georgia Year: 2008 Price: $875,000 Kentucky Year: 2011 Price: $450,000 MSU Year: 2011, 2018 Price: $500,000 N.C. State Year: 2011 Price: $450,000 Michigan Year: 2013 Price: $850,000 N.C. State Year: 2013 Price: $250,000 Clemson Year: 2014 Price: $500,000 By Orrin Shawl Staff Reporter A sketch has been released of the man who attempted to abduct an 18-year-old woman Oct. 14. The incident took place at about 1:50 p.m. near 1100 Cra- po St. in Mount Pleasant. The suspect is described as either Hispanic or American Indian, in his 20s to 30s with black, curly hair, approximately 5 feet 7 inches tall and weighing about 160 pounds. Jeff Browne, Public Infor- mation Officer for the Mount Pleasant Police Department, said the attempted abduction started when a male came up and approached the woman to ask a question. The suspect then began to follow her for a short while, he said. The girl told the suspect to stop following her or she was going to punch him. She then pulled out her phone and be- gan to call for the police, Browne said. The suspect left for a short period of time before coming back out of no- where, where he talked to her about getting into his vehicle for a ride. She said no and continued to walk, then he got out of the vehicle and attempted to grab her with both arms. She broke free and was able to get away from him to a residence where she called the police. “It’s pretty unusual for this area for something like this to happen,” Browne said. “It’s a bit out of place for us.” The vehicle is described as a red single cab older model pick- up truck, with bigger tires and possibly a yellow sticker in the back passenger-side window. [email protected] Attempted kidnapping suspect sketch released By Anamaria Dickerson | Staff Reporter KAITLIN THORESEN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER Macomb sophomore Kristina Hatcher gets deep fried Oreos at Phi Kappa Tau’s Phry Tau fun- draiser Thursday evening at the Phi Kappa Tau House. “It’s for a good cause,” Hatcher said. By Mike Nichols Senior Reporter Central Michigan Uni- versity would be the first university in Michigan to implement a new style of online learning. In Tuesday’s Academic Senate meeting, Provost Gary Shapiro addressed the option of using the National Center for Academic Trans- formation, a nonprofit or- ganization, to implement more online learning to save the university money. Carolyn Jarmon, NCAT vice president, said the cen- ter has worked with about 200 universities and com- munity colleges to enhance learning. They use six differ- ent models of restructuring courses that can be format- ted for different academic disciplines. For many students, lec- tures are not engaging, Jar- mon said. NCAT focuses on information technology, meaning students use more self-learning online soft- ware to take quizzes and view shorter lectures. She said it is normally used in prerequisite undergraduate courses with larger class siz- es. The NCAT system allows universities to save money by placing more students in classes. “Those kinds of things re- duce time having to grade CMU could be first in state to adopt program Faculty voice concerns with online additions A ACADEMICS | 2 A great horned owl is presented to members of the audience during the Live Raptor Show Thursday night in Anspach 162. By Ben Harris Senior Reporter The Phi Kappa Tau house smelled of batter and french fries as brothers fried food for a charitable cause. The event ran Thursday night at the Phi Kappa Tau house, 906 Main St., where endless fries were served with cheese, chili and other condi- ments. Fried Oreos, pickles and Twinkies were also sold, with proceeds benefitting the Hole in the Wall Camps. “The charity was founded by one of our brothers, (fa- mous actor) Paul Newman,” said Grosse Ile sophomore Zack Kowalski. “It sends ter- minally ill children to sum- mer camp for free.” About 300 to 400 people attended the event, Kowalski said. The first Phry Tau event last year raised about $1,000 for the charity. Tristan Nelson, a Ypsilanti senior and the fra- ternity’s philanthropy chair- man, said the event will be held annually. “I’m just excited to have this big event,” Kowalski said. “Sometimes people bring things for us to fry for them, so we throw some batter on it and see if it works.” There was live music at the event. Saginaw junior Ben Schuller played acoustic sets at 6:30 and 8:30 p.m. “We’re hoping to make $1,500 to $2,000 this year,” Nelson said. “We set it up all day and volunteer at night for free. Apart from raising mon- ey for kids, we just like to hang out all day with our brothers.” Kowalski said he felt like the event was more organized this time, but would have Phi Kappa Tau hosts Phry Tau, raises money Sales benefit terminally ill children A HOSTS | 2 “They make weird noises and drive their parents crazy,” Joe said. He also said screech owls can have up to eight babies at a time and can sound like ghosts. He said often people will go to old, empty barns and hear ghost-like sounds, but when any outside noise is made, the owls go quiet. Barb said the best part about helping these endangered birds is that it’s a worthwhile cause. “Being able to see the con- nection and reaction these animals have with people is the most rewarding,” she said, “as well as helping the environ- ment.” Unfortunately, many of these animals are in the care of the Rogers because of tragic experiences. “Many of these animals mi- grate to where people are,” Joe said. “The two most common causes of death for these ani- mals are cars and gunshots, but (they) also get injured from wir- ing, fences and poison.” Joe said many of these en- dangered animals are found in the Upper Peninsula, but have also been found living near De- troit. “I think it’s really neat that they’re helping the animals and can bring them to campus,” said Mount Pleasant sopho- more Jessica Cregger. [email protected] Joe Rogers used humor to engage the audience at a raptor show that featured a variety of birds. Rogers, a biologist of the Wildlife Recovery Association and resident of Oil City, co-hosted the show Thursday night put on by the Wildlife Society, a registered student organization. His wife Barb also was a co-host of the show, which brought about 150 people. “A lot of people study birds now but don’t get to see them up close,” Joe said. “I grew up taking care of ani- mals and worked with the DNR and was a veterinarian, so that’s how I became involved with the WRA.” The WRA began in 1979 and provides wildlife services and care for orphaned and injured raptors, or birds of prey Joe talked about various birds including screech owls, which he compared to teenagers. been more successful without the rain. “We’ve been selling tickets for about three weeks, and about a week ago we put up flyers and a Facebook event,” he said. “We don’t have the count yet, but we probably raised at least what we raised last time.” Nelson said there was good w Ghadafi’s death a signals transition, 6 w Chippewas prepare for Ball State, 7 [ INSIDE] w CMU student works with police dept. to enforce bicycle safety laws , 3 w New FYE course added for LGBTQ students, allies, 6 w Liquor tax cut by 1.85 percent, 3 CM-LIFE.COM w Check out the website for a video of the event

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Page 1: Oct. 21, 2011

|LIFE

CENTRAL MICHIGAN

Midori sushi, martini bar opens today after year and a half of renovations, 3

Central Michigan University Friday, Oct. 21, 2011

[cm-life.com]

93 Years of Serving as Central Michigan University’s Independent Voice

PHOTOS BY VICTORIA ZEGLER/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHEROil City resident and raptor biologist Joe Roger, co-owner of the Wildlife Recovery Association in Shepherd, shows members of the audience their snow owl Snowy Thursday night during the Live Raptor Show in Anspach 162. The event was hosted by the Central Michigan University Wildlife Society who teams up with the association every year helping with tasks such as trimming beaks and talons, painting cages and feeding the birds.

raptors on campusWildlife Society hosts birds of prey presentation

By Matt ThompsonAssistant Sports Editor

The University of Michigan will pay Central Michigan Uni-versity $850,000 to come to Ann Arbor to play football on Aug. 31, 2013.

The contract states CMU will also be given 450 tickets to the game according to information Central Michigan Life gathered from filing a Freedom of Infor-mation Act.

This was the second non-conference game scheduled for 2013. CMU is also traveling to North Carolina State two weeks after going to U-M.

The Chippewas will make $250,000 from that game. The to-tal is low because the N.C. State Wolfpack is coming to Kelly/Shorts Stadium in 2014.

CMU Athletic Director Dave Heeke said traveling to Georgia in 2008 was the biggest contract, where the Chippewas made $875,000. This would be the sec-ond-highest compensation, but the net gain might be greater by not having to travel and stay in Georgia.

The Chippewas are 0-3 against U-M. The last time CMU played at Michigan Stadium was in 2006 and the Chippewas lost 41-17. This was when U-M was ranked 10th in the country.

The $850,000 is considerably larger than the $500,000 Michi-gan State University paid CMU to come this fall.

“Large schools are able to pay more out,” Heeke said in a pre-vious interview. “Michigan will

make $5 million on an average football Saturday. That’s why they’re able to pay visiting teams that they’re favored to win. The more competitive the game, the lower the price.”

Heeke also said on the best day; CMU will make $300,000 on a home game. The 450 tickets is more than the 400 tickets MSU gave, but the Spartans gave CMU the option of purchasing another 5,000.

U-M will have until Feb. 1, 2014 to pay CMU.

[email protected]

Michigan to pay CMU $850,000 for 2013

F O O T B A L L

PAYDAYSPast and present funds from football games

• GeorgiaYear: 2008Price: $875,000• KentuckyYear: 2011Price: $450,000• MSUYear: 2011, 2018Price: $500,000• N.C. StateYear: 2011Price: $450,000• MichiganYear: 2013Price: $850,000• N.C. StateYear: 2013Price: $250,000• ClemsonYear: 2014Price: $500,000

By Orrin ShawlStaff Reporter

A sketch has been released of the man who attempted to abduct an 18-year-old woman Oct. 14.

The incident took place at about 1:50 p.m. near 1100 Cra-po St. in Mount Pleasant. The suspect is described as either Hispanic or American Indian, in his 20s to 30s with black, curly hair, approximately 5 feet 7 inches tall and weighing about 160 pounds.

Jeff Browne, Public Infor-mation Officer for the Mount Pleasant Police Department, said the attempted abduction started when a male came up and approached the woman to ask a question. The suspect then began to follow her for a short while, he said.

The girl told the suspect to stop following her or she was going to punch him. She then pulled out her phone and be-

gan to call for the police, Browne said.

The suspect left for a short period of time before coming back out of no-where, where he talked to her about getting into his vehicle for a ride. She said no and continued to walk, then he got out of the vehicle and attempted to grab her with both arms. She broke free and was able to get away from him to a residence where she called the police.

“It’s pretty unusual for this area for something like this to happen,” Browne said. “It’s a bit out of place for us.”

The vehicle is described as a red single cab older model pick-up truck, with bigger tires and possibly a yellow sticker in the back passenger-side window.

[email protected]

Attempted kidnapping suspect sketch released

By Anamaria Dickerson | Staff Reporter

KAITLIN THORESEN/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERMacomb sophomore Kristina Hatcher gets deep fried Oreos at Phi Kappa Tau’s Phry Tau fun-draiser Thursday evening at the Phi Kappa Tau House. “It’s for a good cause,” Hatcher said.

By Mike NicholsSenior Reporter

Central Michigan Uni-versity would be the first university in Michigan to implement a new style of online learning.

In Tuesday’s Academic Senate meeting, Provost Gary Shapiro addressed the option of using the National Center for Academic Trans-formation, a nonprofit or-ganization, to implement more online learning to save the university money.

Carolyn Jarmon, NCAT vice president, said the cen-ter has worked with about

200 universities and com-munity colleges to enhance learning. They use six differ-ent models of restructuring courses that can be format-ted for different academic disciplines.

For many students, lec-tures are not engaging, Jar-mon said. NCAT focuses on information technology, meaning students use more self-learning online soft-ware to take quizzes and view shorter lectures. She said it is normally used in prerequisite undergraduate courses with larger class siz-es. The NCAT system allows universities to save money by placing more students in classes.

“Those kinds of things re-duce time having to grade

CMU could be first instate to adopt programFaculty voice concerns with online additions

A ACADEMICS | 2

A great horned owl is presented to members of the audience during the Live Raptor Show Thursday night in Anspach 162.

By Ben HarrisSenior Reporter

The Phi Kappa Tau house smelled of batter and french fries as brothers fried food for a charitable cause.

The event ran Thursday night at the Phi Kappa Tau house, 906 Main St., where endless fries were served with cheese, chili and other condi-ments. Fried Oreos, pickles and Twinkies were also sold, with proceeds benefitting the Hole in the Wall Camps.

“The charity was founded by one of our brothers, (fa-mous actor) Paul Newman,” said Grosse Ile sophomore Zack Kowalski. “It sends ter-minally ill children to sum-mer camp for free.”

About 300 to 400 people

attended the event, Kowalski said.

The first Phry Tau event last year raised about $1,000 for the charity. Tristan Nelson, a Ypsilanti senior and the fra-ternity’s philanthropy chair-man, said the event will be held annually.

“I’m just excited to have this big event,” Kowalski said. “Sometimes people bring things for us to fry for them, so we throw some batter on it and see if it works.”

There was live music at the event. Saginaw junior Ben Schuller played acoustic sets at 6:30 and 8:30 p.m.

“We’re hoping to make $1,500 to $2,000 this year,” Nelson said. “We set it up all day and volunteer at night for free. Apart from raising mon-ey for kids, we just like to hang out all day with our brothers.”

Kowalski said he felt like the event was more organized this time, but would have

Phi Kappa Tau hosts Phry Tau, raises moneySales benefitterminally illchildren

A HOSTS | 2

“They make weird noises and drive their parents crazy,” Joe said.

He also said screech owls can have up to eight babies at a time and can sound like ghosts. He said often people will go to old, empty barns and hear ghost-like sounds, but when any outside noise is made, the owls go quiet.

Barb said the best part about

helping these endangered birds is that it’s a worthwhile cause.

“Being able to see the con-nection and reaction these animals have with people is the most rewarding,” she said, “as well as helping the environ-ment.”

Unfortunately, many of these animals are in the care of the Rogers because of tragic experiences.

“Many of these animals mi-grate to where people are,” Joe said. “The two most common causes of death for these ani-mals are cars and gunshots, but (they) also get injured from wir-ing, fences and poison.”

Joe said many of these en-dangered animals are found in the Upper Peninsula, but have also been found living near De-troit.

“I think it’s really neat that they’re helping the animals and can bring them to campus,” said Mount Pleasant sopho-more Jessica Cregger.

[email protected]

Joe Rogers used humor to engage the audience at a

raptor show that featured a variety of birds.

Rogers, a biologist of the Wildlife Recovery Association

and resident of Oil City, co-hosted the show Thursday

night put on by the Wildlife Society, a registered student

organization.

His wife Barb also was a co-host of the show, which

brought about 150 people.

“A lot of people study birds now but don’t get to see

them up close,” Joe said. “I grew up taking care of ani-

mals and worked with the DNR and was a veterinarian,

so that’s how I became involved with the WRA.”

The WRA began in 1979 and provides wildlife services

and care for orphaned and injured raptors, or birds of prey

Joe talked about various birds including screech owls,

which he compared to teenagers.

been more successful without the rain.

“We’ve been selling tickets for about three weeks, and about a week ago we put up flyers and a Facebook event,” he said. “We

don’t have the count yet, but we probably raised at least what we raised last time.”

Nelson said there was good

w Ghadafi ’s death a signals transition, 6

w Chippewas prepare for Ball State, 7

[INSIDE]w CMU student works with police dept. to enforce bicycle safety laws , 3

w New FYE course added for LGBTQ students, allies, 6

w Liquor tax cut by 1.85 percent, 3

CM-LIFE.COMw Check out the website for a video of the event

Page 2: Oct. 21, 2011

quizzes, and when faculty don’t have to do that kind of thing, they can have a few more students in their class,” Jarmon said. “All of a sudden, you have a faculty member who was teaching extra courses, now has more free time and can offer more graduate courses.”

Jarmon said CMU is aware of NCAT, but has not offi-cially applied to be in the program at this time. The universities that have, she said, have seen successful financial savings.

It creates a larger class with more tutors and gradu-ate assistants, meaning less work for faculty, she said.

Laura Frey, Faculty Asso-ciation president and asso-ciate professor of counsel-ing and special education, said she is concerned NCAT would create problems for faculty by making them es-sentially expendable.

Frey said implement-ing more online course-work could allow for more chances to get around work or to cheat. Additionally, it leaves faculty less time with students, meaning students have to learn on their own.

Why should students have

to pay higher tuition just to do more self-teaching, Frey asked.

“It blurs our role as fac-ulty and diminishes our di-rect involvement,” she said. “I hope there may well be a true sincere desire, as Pro-vost Shapiro said, to im-prove quality of learning, but I think the bottom goal is to save money.”

Jarmon said they have not seen faculty losing their jobs because of NCAT. In most cases, institutions have goals for additional upper division courses, and NCAT frees up faculty personnel to develop and teach them, she said.

Monte Boisen, chairman of the math department at the University of Idaho, has used NCAT and is sup-portive of it. He first tried it when he was teaching math at Virginia Tech University.

He saw improvement in the grades and has gained ground ever since, he said.

“NCAT was very helpful,” Boisen said. “The thing they helped the most with was they provided rubrics to guide us along in terms of organizing our transforma-tion.”

Universities go through an

application process before NCAT chooses them. The center coaches individu-als on how to enhance their particular class and let the university take it from there. Universities that choose to use the program can indi-vidually implement it for courses, without applying it to the entire department or college it falls under.

Boison said using the ap-proach helped him teach groups of students with dif-ferent learning styles all in

one class.“There’s no cookie cutter

approach,” he said. “But in order to be successful, they need to have the one-on-one time.”

As a faculty member, Boisen said it is normal to have fears about NCAT, but it does not cause loss of tenure-track faculty. It did, however, cause disconnect between them and their classes.

“The tenure-track really became disconnected from

those courses, which isn’t all good,” he said. “But I think they were overall happy about it.”

Frey said she did think some of NCAT’s ideas were good, but is concerned CMU administration would force it on the faculty without let-ting them have a say.

“The words sound nice,” Frey said. “But at this point, the faculty haven’t been in-volved with steps forward.”

[email protected]

2 || Friday, Oct. 21, 2011 || Central Michigan Life cm-life.com/category/news[NEWS]

Twitter.com/CMUAthleticsFacebook.com/CMUAthletics

Central Michigan this weekend in cmu athletics

Groups of 4 students will receive FREE PIZZA all season!

Groups of 4 students will receive FREE PIZZA all season!

Final home regular season match of 2011! Offer is still on the table to have a chance to win $150.00!!

All Home Volleyball matches are played in McGuirk Arena!All Home Soccer matches are played at the CMU Soccer Complex!

Soccer vs. Toledo, 4 pm

Soccer vs. Ball State, 1 pm

Volleyball vs. Buffalo, 7 pm

Volleyball vs. Akron, 7 pm

A HUGE weekend of Soccer for your defending MAC Champs!Come on out for FREE Pizza, and a chance to win $150.00!!

TOGETHER WE ARE MAROON

HALLOWEEN COUNTRYLocated Inside Black-Tie Tuxedo and Costume Shop1017 S. Mission Street, Mt. Pleasant • (989) 772-1430

MONDAY thru SATURDAY10AM to 8PM;SUNDAY 1PM to 5PMFREE BLACK TIE with the purchaseof any retailcostume of$25.00 or more. (While supplies last, seestore for details)

$500 OFF Any ONE

Retail CostumePurchase of $25 or more

1000’s for purchase & 100’s for rental www.blacktietuxedoandcostume.com

SHOPSHOPSHOPSHOPSHOPSHOP

LOCALLYLOCALLYLOCALLY

with thewith thewith the

Costume ShopCostume ShopCostume Shop

that is herethat is herethat is hereall year!all year!all year!

Attention Students!It’s the Biggest Sale of the Year!

99¢ TANS*That’s right, all

College Students cantan for just 99 cents

at Image Sun!

Sale ends Sunday, October 23rd

Tell Your Friends!

4445 Bluegrass Road, Suite 1B

(989) 773-TANS

The Association of Future Speech-Language Pathologists with the Department of Communication Disorders

Proudly Presents:

The Academy Award Winning Movie:

The King’s Speech:Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Pearce 128 • 6:00pm

Freecommemorating

CMU’s Stuttering Awareness Week All Are WelCoMe!

TODAYw The Love & Respect Mar-riage Conference will be held from 6:30 to 10 p.m. at the Mount Pleasant First Church of the Nazarene, 1980 S. Lincoln Road.

w A ballroom dancing class teaching the Salsa and Me-rengue will be offered from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. at the Off-Broadway Performing Arts Stu-dio, 118 S. Washington St.

w Great Lakes Fibers Used in Basketry & Weaving will be presented by Kelly Church from 1 to 3 p.m. at the Zi ibiwing Center, 6650 E. Broadway St.

w John Kostelnick from Illi-nois State University will pres-ent his research on "Visualizing the Hazard: Challenges for Ge-ovisualization in Crisis Manage-ment" from 11 a.m. to noon in the Dow Science Complex, room 270

w The Past and Present Lun-cheon will be held from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the Bovee University Center, Maroon and Gold room.

SATURDAYw George Lopez will perform his stand up comedy show "I Can Never Do Nuthin!" at 8 p.m. at The Soaring Eagle Ca-sino and Resort, 6800 Soaring Eagle Blvd.

w A West Michigan Ghost Hunter Society Event will be held from 1 to 3 p.m. at the Veterans Memorial Library, 301 S. University St.

EVENTS CALENDAR

Corrections

© Central Michigan Life 2011Volume 93, Number 27

In Wednesday’s story about new businesses, the owner for Endurance Fitness is Ale-sha Thayer, not Alesha Thay.

PHOTO OF THE DAY

CHARLOTTE BODAK/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERSaginaw senior Todd Herzberg watches printmaker Bill Hosterman mix ink during his demonstration Thursday afternoon in Wightman Hall room 146. “I think that the demonstration is going really well,” Herzberg said. “It’s great to see an outside source to get information from on printmaking.”

ACADEMICS |CONTINUED FROM 1

HOSTS |CONTINUED FROM 1

community support for the event. Most of the money to buy the supplies came from the philanthropy budget or alumni donations, he said.

“We’re proud of ourselves because we made a little bit of money to help the less fortu-nate,” he said.

West Bloomfield senior Matt Lenzi said he was there all day and would likely end up closing up for the night.

“I’m having a good time with all my brothers,” he said. “Of course you get a good feel-ing making money for a good cause.”

[email protected]

IN THE NEWSLINKEDIN

UNIMPRESSED AS FACEBOOK DIVES INTO JOB MARKET

IN THE NEWSSTUDY: $4 BILLION GOES TO

COMMUNITY COLLEGE DROPOUTS

By Jessica GuynnLos Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — Face-book Inc. has struck a partnership with the U.S. Labor Department to help the unemployed find jobs.

The deal could position the social-networking site with more than 800 million users to increas-ingly move into profes-sional networking, a field now most closely identi-fied with LinkedIn.

But at the Web 2.0 Sum-mit in San Francisco, LinkedIn Corp. Chairman Reid Hoffman shrugged off the notion of Face-book as a competitive threat.

Asked whether Linke-dIn would be held back by its demographic — the average user is in his or her early to mid-40s — Hoffman retorted: “You mean, like someone who could give you a job?”

His response elicited quite a few chuckles from the audience.

A year ago, LinkedIn Chief Executive Jeff Wein-er said Facebook profiles might not be a good fit for professional networking.

By Rita GiordanoThe Philadelphia Inquirer

A new national study, “The Hidden Costs of Community Colleges,” re-ports that federal, state and local governments in-vested nearly $4 billion in full-time community col-lege students who dropped out after their first year.

In Pennsylvania, that five-year expenditure amounted to about $87 million — $98 million in New Jersey — in govern-ment aid to students and support to schools, ac-cording to data released Thursday by the American Institute for Research of Washington.

Nationally, the report’s authors say, nearly $1 bil-

lion in government funds was spent on these first-time students who dropped out in 2008-09, the most recent year surveyed — a 35-percent increase from five years before.

The hidden costs come when the colleges are see-ing swelling enrollment and increasing demands on their services. Their student bodies now in-clude displaced workers, remedial students, non-English speakers and stu-dents seeking more afford-able higher education.

Also, community col-leges feature prominently in the Obama administra-tion’s pledge to substan-tially increase the num-ber of the nation’s college graduates by 2020.

Page 3: Oct. 21, 2011

INSIDE LIFEFriday Oct. 21, 2011 cm-life.com|

3Ariel Black, Managing Editor | [email protected] | 989.774.4343

Andrew Dooley, Student Life Editor | [email protected] | 989.774.4340

Emily Grove, Metro Editor | [email protected] | 989.774.4342

Theresa Clift, University Editor | [email protected] | 989.774.4344

photoS by andrEw kUhn/assistant photo editorMidori Sushi and Martini Lounge holds a soft opening for invitation guests only Thursday evening in Mount Pleasant. The lounge is located at 105 E. Broadway St. and will open its doors to the public today. “We have a lot of reservations already,” said manager Leah Hetherington of Commerce Township.

A plate of California rolls along with salmon and Tuna Nigiri is ready to be served to invitation only customers Thursday evening at Midori Sushi and Martini Lounge, 105 E. Broadway St.

a raw dealSushi, martini bar opening after a year and a half of renovations

Midori Sushi and Martini Lounge will open today after a year and a half of waiting.

The restaurant, 105 W. Broadway St., had delayed opening after experiencing ownership changes, as well as a grant approval process. It was originally scheduled to open in June 2010.

Midori will have an upscale, contemporary atmosphere that will bring a unique dining experience downtown Mount Pleasant, said owner Rich Swindlehurst in a press release.

Swindlehurst said he wants Midori to be a dining experience unlike any other in Mount Pleasant.

By Lacey Johnson | Staff Reporter

JEFF SMIth/photo editorBrighton Graduate Student Samantha Fiani and Lt. Larry Klaus of the CMU Police Depart-ment are working to promote bicycle safety and awareness on campus.

By Chad MitchellStaff Reporter

Cyclists on campus may find themselves being pulled over and ticketed for violating bike laws in the near future.

Lt. Larry Klaus of the Central Michigan University Police De-partment said it’s not the tickets they’re after, though.

“Our primary goal is to have a safer campus,” Klaus said. “We want to accomplish that through an education com-ponent, training and enforce-ment.”

Klaus said he was excited about a month ago when Brigh-ton graduate student Saman-tha Fiani came to the police department. Fiani approached

the CMU Police with the goal of educating students on proper cycling.

“Mostly what we talk about is how to develop a mutual respect between cyclists, motorists and pedestrians,” Fiani said. “The best way we’ve come up with is to educate everyone.”

Fiani said she is willing to do-nate her time to handle the task. To instruct bicycle safety cours-es, she has to get certification from the League of American Bicyclists. She said certification is the biggest cost she is plan-ning to incur.

She wants to make pam-phlets from the League of Michigan Bicyclists available to students, which they provide at the cost of postage. Fiani said

she can get 300 pamphlets for as low as $20. She plans to in-struct for free once she is cer-tified. Fiani said she wants to educate students, community members and anyone else who is willing to listen.

“It’s really important because the kamikaze style of cycling that we currently have at this university is not sustainable,” she said. “Someone is going to get seriously injured.”

Since August, three bicycle accidents have been reported to CMU Police. In two of these cases, the cyclist was trans-ported to the hospital by am-bulance.

Klaus said he believes ac-cidents involving cyclists are more common than they know.

“Unless somebody gets hurt, those aren’t getting reported to us,” Klaus said.

He said he sees unsafe prac-tices all over campus. A cyclist breaking the law on campus could face penalties ranging from a warning to a $100 ticket, he said.

Klaus said he doesn’t expect every student to be happy with the enforcement of bicycle laws, but it wouldn’t have been pos-sible without the support of stu-dents. Fiani has collected about 300 signatures from students and faculty for a petition to en-force these laws. Not all students are as excited as Klaus and Fiani, though.

Student works with CMU Police to enforce bicycle safety laws

“As soon as you walk in the door of Midori, the lively design will trans-port you into a metro-politan atmosphere,” Swindlehurst said.

In an email, Downtown Development Director Michelle Sponseller said she is looking forward to the opening of the res-taurant.

“Before renovations started on the build-ing, it was a shell of a

building that didn’t have much life,” Sponseller said. “Today it’s a fantas-tic looking building with a lively business inside.”

According to the press release, Executive Chef Jake Wendt created the menu to include Japa-nese cuisine with other Asian influences.

“We are receiving mul-tiple orders of fresh fish per week from both East and West Coast markets.

We choose to purchase fish from vendors who can guarantee certifica-tion for being fished sus-tainably,” Wendt said.

Some students and community members said they would likely visit the new business.

“If there was a su-shi place that served authentic sushi, I’d go there,” said Goodrich sophomore Terrance Eli-zondo.

The martini bar will feature a handcraft-ed cocktail menu with fresh mint, basil, gin-ger, house-made syrups, fresh fruit and purees created by CMU alumna Leah Hetherington.

“I’d go there in a heart-beat,” said Austin Doug-las, Mid Michigan Com-munity college student. “I love sushi.”

metro@cm-l i fe .com

A bikes | 5

By Annie HarrisonSenior Reporter

Editor’s Note: This is the last article in a four-part series about the future of teaching.

The job market for teachers may have taken a downturn in recent years, but that has not discouraged some seniors and alumni from pursuing careers as educators.

Stephanie Glowacki graduat-ed from Central Michigan Uni-versity in 2011 and now teaches third grade at Sacred Heart Academy in Mount Pleasant. She said she decided to stay in Michigan because she wanted to be near her family.

“That was my biggest con-cern,” she said.

Glowacki said her backup plan was to be a substitute teacher until she found a job, and if she had not found a job after a couple years, she would have moved out of Michigan. She said she was nervous about finding a job in-state after grad-uation, so she set up multiple job interviews.

“That’s what I wanted to do, so I just kept looking,” she said.

Right before her third inter-view in July, Glowacki received a phone call with a job offer. She said she was glad to have a job near her home because she loves the area.

“I think Michigan has a lot to offer,” she said.

Nicole Samuilow graduated from CMU in December 2008 and is now teaching kindergar-ten in West Bloomfield.

Samuilow said after she stu-dent-taught, she was hired at the same school the next fall. She said the school ended up needing another kindergar-ten teacher, and she received a phone call with a job offer two weeks before the school year started in 2009.

“It wasn’t really a consider-ation to go elsewhere,” she said. “I was in the right place at the right time.”

Samuilow said she graduated when people were beginning to worry about teaching jobs in Michigan, so she had a lot of friends who had to go out of state to find jobs in education. She said she believes fewer stu-dents are going into teaching because of pay cuts in school districts, and because teaching is a lot of work for not a lot of pay.

“I think it’s much worse now,”

Life for teachers aftergraduation

A teachers | 5

By Jessica FecteauSenior Reporter

Grocery and party stores will see a dip in what they pay in state liquor tax after Gov. Rick Snyder signed a bill Oct. 11.

The law cuts the liquor tax by 1.85 percent at off-site premises, which includes grocery and party stores.

The change will allow re-tail stores to stay competi-tive with restaurants that ca-ter off-premise events using their own supply of alcohol, which was not subject to the tax, the governor’s office said in a statement.

The bill, which was ap-proved 38-0 by the Senate on June 1 and 79-29 by the House on Sept. 20, will re-sult in Michigan losing $14 million from the state bud-get.

Rep. Jeff Irwin, D-Ann Ar-bor, voted against the bill.

“Everyone knows the Michigan budget is in a tough spot,” he said. “I un-derstand my colleagues lev-eling the amount of taxation on liquor, but if they want to fulfill that goal, they need revenue neutral. It’s like spending money you don’t have.”

Continuing to cut funding for schools is not a pathway to prosperity, he said.

Irwin said he doesn’t feel the tax cut will directly im-pact students who drink on campus, because the cut is so small.

Rep. Kevin Cotter, R-Mount Pleasant, said in an email the $14 million is from the Liquor Purchasing Re-volving Fund and only the excess of that fund is depos-ited into the state’s General Fund/General Purpose bud-get.

“Revenue could be gener-ated to off set the decline to the general fund because border sales of liquor will be lowered because of the elimination of the specific tax,” he said.

He said they have been working hard in Lansing to create a level playing field for all businesses to grow in Michigan, and that includes looking at tax codes that have not been thoroughly reviewed in years.

Liquor tax cut by 1.85 percent

A liquor | 5

By Alexandria WoolworthStaff Reporter

Although Advanced Place-ment tests are more popular, students found CLEP tests more passable last year.

College Level Examination Program tests can be adminis-tered to any Central Michigan University student, and cost $95 ($70 to CLEP and $25 to CMU for a scheduling fee).

The College Board’s Advanced Placement exams, or AP tests,

cost $87. They are taken be-fore college, usually after a high school AP class. Students who score a three or higher out of five earn credit for a comparable course.

Sterling Heights sophomore Rebecca Pittman earned college credit by passing the AP tests for calculus and psychology. She also passed the CLEP test for English 101.

“I feel that the CLEP tests are easier then AP tests, but I feel if I had not taken AP classes in high

school, then I would not have been able to pass the CLEP tests,” she said. “I feel both are a good option for saving money.”

A passing score on either test earns the student credit.

CLEPs are offered in 33 differ-ent subjects. Eighty-three per-cent of the 326 students who took a CLEP test last year passed. The English composition test was the most popular, which made up 64 percent of tests taken.

Last year 2,302 freshmen took an AP test in the fall and 51 per-

cent passed with credit. The most popular test was the AP English, followed by AP Math, AP Science, AP History and AP Lan-guage.

Out of 647 students who took AP English, about 57 percent passed. These results were similar for AP Science and AP Math.

For AP History and AP Lan-guage, however, the results were lower. In history, 333 tested and about 23 percent of these passed, and in language 36 students test-

ed and about 33 percent passed.Some students think their

high school teachers’ curriculum and rigor affect how they per-form on AP tests.

“(My teacher) really cared about us and pushed us really hard, so there was definitely an advantage, gaining an opportu-nity to learn more,” said Zeeland freshman Panuka Phomvongsa.

He passed the AP Psychology test and earned credit.

There is also a sample test that can be taken for $10; both the

CLEP and sample test are scored on a range of 20-80.

CMU decides the CLEP scor-ing based on the rigor of the classes that will follow. Depend-ing on the test, its scoring may be more difficult than the AP scor-ing.

CLEP tests are given in the computer-based placement testing center located in the low-er level Robinson dining com-mons.

[email protected]

AP tests more popular but CLEP tests more passable last year

Results in $14 million loss from state budget

Page 4: Oct. 21, 2011

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Friday, Oct. 21, 2011 cm-life.com

VOICES|

4

EDITORIAL | Proposed online program brings questions

For whose benefit?

Editorial Board: Eric Dresden, Editor-in-ChiEf | Ariel Black, Managing Editor |

Connor Sheridan, onlinE Coordinator | Theresa Clift, UnivErsity Editor |

Andrew Dooley, stUdEnt lifE Editor | Brad Canze, staff ColUMnist

Nathan InksColumnist

Ben HarrisSenior Reporter

Broken phones;brokendreams

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Carol Twigg, president and chief executive of the National Center for Academic Transformation, the non-profit organization that would implement the new technology, said in a report by the Chronicle of Higher Education that the pro-grams include online quizzes and assignments. Twigg said NCAT’s programs reduce the needed num-ber of professors and, on aver-age, reduce the costs of teaching a course by 37 percent.

This plan by the administration, and the response by the senators, was a calculated move by both sides.

Still in the midst of a standstill in faculty contract negotiations, intro-

ducing plans to reduce the need for professors is obviously intended as a jab.

Even if the quality of educa-tion is exactly the same and it is an economic no-brainer to make the switch, the timing of the announce-ment makes its intent clear. As the FA works without a current contract it seems interesting that this subject would come up in a meeting.

The negative reaction of the aca-demic senators, many of whom are FA members, is understandable.

But before condemning NCAT’s program as impersonal, specifics should be provided for what exactly the program would do if imple-mented.

Would these more-automated courses free up professors’ time for higher-level classes and research, or would they be out of a job?

The NCAT system allows uni-versities to save money by placing more students in classes, said Caro-lyn Jarmon, NCAT vice president.

This could throw CMU’s student-professor ratio, which is a relatively low one for our position in Michi-gan higher education, out of bal-ance.

Students also pay for the on-cam-pus experience. Should students have to pay the already-inflated rates to take more quizzes online?

Would using online software for classes normally taught by graduate assistants greatly reduce the ability of graduate students to pay for their education?

Most importantly, would the quality of education provided meet the current standard of education at CMU?

At Tuesday’s Academic Senate meeting, Central Michigan University administra-tors and senators clashed over using more

technology in classes to reduce costs.

Across the state, attention has re-cently been given to the issue of medi-cal marijuana dispensaries’ legality un-der the Michigan Medical Marihuana Act (MMMA).

Brandon McQueen, the former own-er of Compassionate Apothecary, a dis-pensary that facilitates the patient-to-patient sale of marijuana, lost a court case at the Michigan Court of Appeals in August and recently held a rally in Mount Pleasant. His dispensary rented out lockers where clients could store excess marijuana for the future sale to other patients.

McQueen argued that because the dispensary did not own the marijua-na, that it was not “selling” the mari-juana nor in violation of exceeding the amount of marijuana allowed per pa-tient or caregiver.

This logic, while sound on the sur-face, falls apart when looking at prec-edent from previous court cases.

Through dispensing the marijuana in exchange for monetary payment, while dispensaries do not own the mar-ijuana, they clearly “exercise dominion or control over the substance,” which courts have said falls under the term “possession.”

Because the dispensaries are also tak-ing a percentage from the price mem-bers had set, and because a sale would not take place without the dispensary, the court rightfully found that dispensa-ries were engaged in “selling” marijuana.

The court correctly ruled that under the MMMA, that “medical use” does not permit the “sale” of marijuana.

The court’s line of reasoning is further supported in the MMMA itself, which states, “A registered primary caregiver may receive compensation for costs associated with assisting a registered qualifying patient in the medical use of marihuana. Any such compensation shall not constitute the sale of controlled substances.” The only money that can be given for marijuana is the amount of money a caregiver loses by helping someone administer marijuana.

If dispensaries or caregivers are mak-ing money from the transfer of mari-juana, this violates the act.

The court ruled that because the dispensary possessed more marijuana than its owners were allowed to have, they were in violation of the MMMA. Furthermore, it ruled that any dispen-sary facilitating the sale of marijuana is also illegal under the Public Health Code because the MMMA does not al-low the sale of marijuana.

While the appeals court correctly ruled on the case, the issue is far from resolved, and an appeal to the Michi-gan Supreme Court is likely. Problems with the law were predicted after it passed a state-wide vote, and there is an easy solution — legalize marijuana altogether.

It is time the nation ends its double standard between keeping alcohol and tobacco legal while keeping marijuana criminalized. Legalize marijuana and punish those who abuse it like we do with alcohol. Doing so would not only end debates such as this, but would allow police and officials to focus on things that do more harm to society.

Until this is done, the debate over medical marijuana will continue, but under current Michigan law, it is un-likely that marijuana dispensaries will be allowed to reopen.

Editor’s Note: Nathan Inks is the cur-rent president of College Republicans.

In June I was lucky to score an expensive smartphone for free. Now I want to run it over with my car.

My texts don’t send, I have to flick my touch screen to get it to work and Words with Friends isn’t nearly as fun as everybody made it out to be.

The phone before the one I have now was a dumb phone. It had the computing power of a cat. It could make calls. It sent texts. I was happy.

The blazin’ fast 4G internet that I pay extra for each month is so slow, I could walk to the library and use one of those computers faster than it takes a page to load on my phone. I thought it would be good to check my email on the go. It didn’t take very long to re-alize that even if I really did want to check my email on the go, it would be quicker to build a time machine, travel to the past, and connect via dial up. Yes, I do un-derstand that makes no sense.

I don’t even know what half the settings on this thing do.

I’m afraid that if I touch any-thing, the nuclear reactor inside will melt down. I don’t want to be responsible for that.

It could just be my service pro-vider, I didn’t have nearly as many problems with my old phone. I used to get great reception in my basement with my old phone. Now I have to catapult to space and touch the satellite with the tip of my phone if I want to be able to make out anything the person on the other line is saying.

That’s why I think technology for technology’s sake is bad. I got sucked in because I thought smartphones sounded great, and now I’m realizing I’d rather just have a phone with a cord.

The more I break it down, the more I realize I’m paying for nothing. I have the luxury of look-ing something up on Wikipedia while I’m in class instead of hav-ing to remember to do it when I get home. But if I get home and forget about it, it probably wasn’t all that important anyway.

Some people are in love with their gadgets. I don’t get that. I guess when you spend that much money on anything it’s hard not to be in love with it, but it makes me wonder about the point of spend-ing thousands of dollars on some-thing so you can connect to the internet while you’re kayaking.

Best option for marijuana

In response to “Academic transfor-mation discussed at Academic Senate meeting; academic prioritization to be released within a week”

UTFmember - ThursdayJust a few weeks after Arum and

Roksa presented their findings from Academically Adrift, arguing strongly and with strong evidence for an in-crease in rigor, writing, reading, and face-to-face pedagogy in college-lev-el education, the Provost tries to force faculty into a program that would reduce class time, cut costs, and em-phasize the sort of cheap, automated, multiple-choice curriculum which is largely responsible for students today getting As and Bs without actually learning anything in their classes.

The A-Senate is right to resist this strongly. Cavataio’s suggestion that faculty concerns are “not addressed in the Academic Transformation documents” counts against, not for, those documents, which should be read with the care and scepticism we apply to advertising copy.

In response to COLUMN: “Decision to ban holidays right move”

Tay Owens - ThursdayAmerican schoolchildren spend

more hours in school each day and have more homework than children in almost every other Western nation, including many which do far better than we do on performance indices.

Part of the reason our schools are failing when compared with those of dozens of other countries is that we give children too much scattershot work rather than concentrating on more focused curricula and letting them have more free time to digest their lessons while just being kids.

We should have more relaxed holiday time in schools, not less, sur-rounding more focused lessons.

The other thing making Ameri-ca’s schools fail is mis-“educators” like Foley, who are responsible for making our curricula unfocused by overloading them with multicultural

baubles which make students less fo-cused and less interested in the ma-terial by downplaying its importance and their connection with it. If Co-lumbus is just some foreign invader, why pay attention to lessons about him? If our historical leaders were genocidal and racist, why pay atten-tion to them?

We are unmaking the most suc-cessful culture, which has fostered huge advances in unprecedented time, through our thoughtless under-mining of all that built it.

MK - ThursdayI agree with caringsoul. Nathan,

you assume learning only involves sitting at a desk. Can these students learn nothing by celebrating these Holidays? And when you talk about this being a problem in our schools I asked my dad, who would have been in elementary school in the late 1940’s if they celebrated holidays in school...you know what, they DID.

Besides much of the “problems” in our schools come not from the schools from societal issues affect-ing the students. All you have to do is look up stats on income and edu-cational achievement, or on race and educational achievement. We will never compete with ethnically ho-mogenous and smaller countries like those of Europe and Asia when it comes to test scores. They do not have the wealth/culture disparities we have. Look at the country ranked no. 1 for education in the world, Fin-land, with less than 4 million people, few wealth disparities, and almost to-tally homogenous.

Furthermore, do we want to simply be the best test-takers in the world, or do we want to teach our children how to THINK?

You are only a kid once. These kids deserve the celebration and they can LEARN from it as well.

You are being extremely ignorant, because you obviously assume noth-ing can be learned in celebrating these holidays.

Now, why don’t you post an edito-

rial retracting your last one?

In response to “COLUMN: Ban smoking outright”

harleyrider1989 - ThursdayWe’ve been told for years second-

hand smoke is deadly dangerous but we are here alive and there are no deaths from it, not even close.

It’s an exaggerated, created science all its own. It’s propaganda - fallacies created to have justifications for a new round of tobacco prohibition. I am for freedom, freedom for all people to have their own place in this world, including the smokers!

Tobacco smoke maybe an irritant to some, but that’s about it. Its chemi-cal makeup has been so exaggerated by tobacco control pundits, it’s insani-ty. Only 6 percent of tobacco smoke constitutes those 7,000 theorized and identified components of the smoke. Theorized is the word, since the claimed chemicals are themselves so small they can barely be detected. Nanograms, femtograms are the sizes of what can be detected so they theo-rize the rest. Four percent is carbon monoxide, while nearly 90 percent constitutes ordinary atmospheric air! These figures come from the surgeon general’s report in 1989.

Oh the pundits may bring up ben-zene in tobacco smoke. The average cigarette produces roughly 300 mi-crograms of benzene (1986 report of the surgeon general. p.130) 0.3 mi-crograms - 300 nanograms.

Benzene is normally found in fruits, fish, vegetables, nuts, dairy products, beverages and eggs. The National Cancer Institute estimates that an individual may safely ingest up to 250 micrograms in their food per day, every single day of the year.

Thus, the “safe” exposure to ben-zene from one day of a normal diet is roughly equal to the exposure expe-rienced by a nonsmoker sharing an airspace with smokers for over 750 hours.

It’s a political movement and it was never about health....

Page 5: Oct. 21, 2011

By Shelby MillerStaff Reporter

A new First Year Experi-ence course, FYE 101D: First Year Experience Course for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Trans-gender and Ally Students will be offered this spring.

Student Ombuds Officer Jon Humiston said the main reason for creating the course is to make underclassmen aware of the resources avail-able on campus.

“Campus climate studies conducted at CMU indicate that LGBTQ students are not connecting to the resources available to them on campus until their second or third year at CMU,” Humiston said.

The class was scheduled to launch for the fall 2011 semester, but was canceled because of low enrollment. FYE and LGBTQ services are working to get the word out about the new course so students will register for spring.

“Sections of First Year Experience are a growing trend on campuses across the U.S.,” Humiston said.

Shannon Jolliff, direc-tor of LGBTQ services, said student assistants are work-ing through email groups to find out which schools throughout Michigan, Ohio, Illinois and Indiana have gay/straight alliance programs.

They hope to contact stu-dents who are in the pro-cess of deciding where to go to college and raise aware-ness of Central Michigan University’s LGBTQ pro-gram and support, Jolliff said.

Macomb sophomore and Spectrum President Justin Gawronski said he focuses on helping promote the new course at general meet-ings and campus events like Tuesday’s Speak Up, Speak Out forum.

Although the class is not available for registration yet, Humiston said Jason Bentley, director of First Year Experience, are work-ing to get it added to the system by the time most freshmen can register.

The course will be held Monday and Wednesday from 12 to 12:50 p.m.

“After this upcoming se-mester’s course, the hope is that this special section of FYE will be filled every fall semester from this point forward,” Humiston said.

The new course will meet the same objectives every FYE course meets, while tailoring activities to LG-

BTQ interests.Humiston said the main

difference for the new course is that LGBTQ students will be able to learn in an envi-ronment that is safe.

“Over the span of eight weeks, students will explore their personal identities, de-velop strategies to succeed academically and participate in group activities, both in and outside of the classroom and connect with important resources on campus,” Hum-

iston said.The course will also al-

low students to play a role in planning Pride Week this spring and Coming Out Week next fall, Jolliff said

Overall, Jolliff said she believes the goal is to raise positive leadership on CMU’s campus.

“Finding your voice is just as important as your educa-tion,” Humiston said.

[email protected]

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Central Michigan Life || Friday, oct. 21, 2011 || 5

New FYE class starting in spring added for LGBTQ students, allies

“Finding your voice is just as important as your education.”

Jon Humiston, ombuds student officer

By Annie HarrisonSenior Reporter

Political Science Department Chairman Orlando Perez said Moammar Gadhafi’s death af-ter 40 years in power represents a transition for Libya.

“I think it’s a significant move forward for Libya and the Liby-an people,” he said. “It’s an end of an era for the North African country.”

According to CNN, Gad-hafi was killed Thursday in his hometown of Sirte, Libya. Prime Minister Mahmoud Jibril said Gadhafi died in a crossfire between government troops and his loyalists.

Perez said he believes this is a vindication of Barack Obama’s policies in Libya.

Perez said Gadhafi’s death is a major global event that il-lustrates how governments change and collapse under popular uprising.

“It’s certainly a major victory for U.S. policy and for our allies in NATO,” he said. “It’s a culmi-nation of U.S. and NATO policy of supporting the rebels and at-tacking the Gadhafi regime.”

Netherlands freshman Karsten Kip and Bad Axe ju-nior Nick Varner are part of the

PSC 353: Model United Nations class, which will be representing Yemen at the American Model United Nations International Conference in Chicago this se-mester. Kip said the class is pre-paring for the model UN confer-ence based on current Yemen policies, which are unstable and could change at any time.

Kip said the Libyan leader’s death was to be expected, and it serves as a signal to other coun-tries that dictators can be top-pled. He said the future of the region is uncertain, and study-ing these events makes political science more interesting.

“It’s one of the big things go-ing on right now,” he said. “It’s like anything could happen.”

Kip said, as an international student, he was glad to see European forces were also in-volved in Libya.

“At least we’re doing some-thing,” he said. “It’s a promising sign.”

Varner said he would have preferred to see Gadhafi tried for crimes against humanity, but he knew his death was in-evitable if he was in Libya, be-cause of the citizens’ hatred for him.

“There was no way he was going to be able to survive be-

ing taken captive by the type of people in the National Transi-tion Counsel’s army,” he said.

He said the loss of a promi-nent leader of the former gov-ernment in Libya will have a considerable impact on the in-surgency in Libya because they no longer have a single person to rally against.

“I think the dwindling sup-port (for the opposition) will evaporate,” he said.

As for the international com-munity, Varner said he does not think there will be a great effect, because Gadhafi had isolated himself in past decades.

However, Gadhafi’s death could create an increase of ral-lies in countries such as Yemen and Syria that have struggled with oppressive governments, he said.

Varner said he has been fol-lowing the Arab Spring since the uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt. He said all Americans, especially students, should make efforts to become aware of international politics be-cause they affect everyone.

“We’re all members of a glob-al community and it’s time we awoke to that fact,” he said.

[email protected]

Gadhafi’s death signals transition

she said.Student teaching

Some teacher education stu-dents at CMU hope their expe-riences student-teaching will prepare them to establish their careers as they approach gradu-ation.

Crystal Falls senior Tyler Mor-kin is student-teaching French at Mount Pleasant High School. Morkin said in an email he plans to look for employment in Michigan after he graduates in December, but he ultimately plans to move out of state.

His reasons for moving have more to do with the climate than anything else, but the school budget challenges and recent funding cuts to public education do not seem positive for teachers, he said.

“This is unfortunately a prob-lem in most states nationwide, however, so it’s not like I’d be able to dodge the bullet just by leaving Michigan,” he said.

Morkin said he is not worried about employment because he is the coordinator for Learning Management Systems Instruc-tional Support at CMU, but he

would be “terrified” if he were unemployed.

“December is an especially challenging time for teacher education graduates as very few schools hire teachers in the middle of the school year,” he said. “And if they do, it’s typically for a temporary position of some kind.”

Morkin said student teach-ing has given him authentic classroom experience. It’s easy to give a mock lesson in a teach-ing methods class to a group of future teachers who are atten-tively engaged, he said, but as a student teacher he can discover what works and what doesn’t. He said he believes it is important for teacher education graduates looking for jobs to have enthu-siasm and show they care about the students they will be teaching.

Ann Arbor senior Amy Binder is student-teaching fifth grade at Renaissance Public School Acad-emy in Mount Pleasant and will also graduate in December. She said she will probably stay in the Mount Pleasant area next semes-ter, but she isn’t sure where she will go after that.

She said there are opportuni-ties for teacher education gradu-ates in Michigan, but she would like to teach elsewhere while she is young and has the energy to travel.

“At this point in time, I think it would be good for me to move out of state,” she said.

Binder said she is concerned about finding a job because teaching is a competitive skill and there are limited teaching posi-tions. She said all of the teacher education students at CMU have good test scores and GPAs, but interviewing skills are what will make graduates marketable.

Binder said she has gained new responsibilities teach-ing social studies and reading throughout the semester, and in a couple weeks she will have the whole class to herself. She said student teaching has been her biggest learning experience be-cause she has had the opportu-nity to get in the classroom and help students.

“With student teaching, you’re thrown in there for eight hours a day, constantly, every day,” she said. “There’s nothing else that can really prepare you for that other than just jumping in there and doing it.”

[email protected]

TEAchERs |continued from 3

Andy Innis knows cyclists have to abide by laws similar to those of drivers, but would not be happy if he was pulled over.

“As long as I’m not endanger-ing others, I don’t think I should be harassed,” the Traverse City

senior said.Some of the behaviors Fiani

and Klaus want to enforce in-clude the need for cyclists to cross roads at crosswalks, pay attention to drivers who may not see them and avoid using cell phones and music players while riding.

Fiani is hoping to start in-structing bicycle safety courses this spring or next fall. Until she

can start instructing, she is sup-porting bicycle safety through Critical Mass events. These events are held on the last Fri-day of every month.

The Critical Mass is Oct. 28 and is Halloween-themed. Par-ticipants will meet between An-spach and Pearce Halls at 5:30 p.m.

[email protected]

Mike Tobias, executive di-rector of Michigan Alcohol Policy, an all-volunteer group, feels this tax will increase alco-hol consumption.

“In general, lower taxes re-sult in more alcohol consump-tion,” he said. “It makes no sense to the public health as-

sociation.”He said there were 29 legisla-

tors who voted against the cut.“There were 29 heroes, and

79 goats,” he said. “Twenty-nine got the message.”

The sponsor of the new bill also was the one who cut the tobacco taxes, he said.

“It makes me sick to look at it,” he said.

The alcohol taxes in Michi-gan have not been raised in 50 years, Tobias said. He said if the

taxes on alcohol were raised a nickel, Michigan would raise an extra $100 million in revenue in a year. This money in turn could be put toward education, law enforcement and benefit-ting the community, he said.

“They’re struggling for mon-ey to help prevent problems, but some people in office just don’t care about the people,” he said.

[email protected]

bIkEs |continued from 3

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6 || Friday, Oct. 21, 2011 || Central Michigan Life cm-life.com/category/news[NEWS]

Haunted campus

ADAM NIEMI/STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERStudents stand in at the entrance of the CMU underground tunnels Thursday night, as part of the Legends of the Dark tour.

By Jordan SpenceSenior Reporter

East Lansing resident Kevin Epling hopes that a new Michigan anti-bul-lying law goes further in the Michigan legislature than others in the past.

Senate Bill 137 is now out of Senate Judiciary Committee and will go to the Senate floor some-time this fall, said the bill sponsor Sen. Rick Jones, R-Grand Ledge.

“The difference be-tween this bill and past bills is that it will in-clude every child,” Jones said. “It doesn’t include specific groups, like oth-ers in the past that in-cluded specific language for overweight students or gay students. This bill doesn’t exclude people.”

Jones said the legisla-tion will require all Mich-igan schools to have an anti-bullying policy.

The bill is also known as “Matt’s Safe School Law,” named after Matt Epling, Kevin Epling’s son.

“In 2002 our son Mat-thew was assaulted by upperclassmen as a ‘wel-come to high school haz-ing.’ This affected Matt deeper than what we

Citizens, lawmakers supporting anti-bullying law in Michigan

t h o u g h t , ” Epling said. “The night before we were to talk with police about formal charges, Matt took his own life. We de-cided to be vocal about what happened and have worked to make change and that begins with education and awareness of the issues.”

The first bills aiming to end bullying in Michigan schools were introduced in 1999, but none have been signed into law.

Epling said there have been so many different ex-cuses over the years to pre-vent the law, and every time one excuse is corrected, an-other takes its place.

The only three states that don’t have anti-bullying laws are Michigan, Montana and South Dakota, Epling said.

“There has been much opposition to the bills from Republican leaders,” Epling said. “Even after the lan-

guage was changed and removed, Republican law-makers still would not pass the law in 2009 and had an-other chance in 2011 to do the same. Why are our law-makers going to wait until we lose more children to suicide, or worse, wait for a major school shooting, be-fore they act on this issue?”

Because the language of the bill has changed, people such as Gary Glenn, presi-dent of the American Fam-ily Association of Michigan, expect it to be passed and signed into law.

“We did not think it was necessary or positive to segregate students in spe-cial classes,” Glenn said. “In states such as Iowa, anti-bullying laws with specific language that included gay students can set a precedent for homosexual marriage.”

Jones said while the bill isn’t perfect, it’s a good start and he has not seen too much opposition from any-one yet.

[email protected]

Senate Bill 137 aims to include all children

Rick Jones

By Chad MitchellStaff Reporter

Janet Fase said the Dash for a Difference 5K Saturday isn’t like most charity runs.

“It’s something different,” the Kalamazoo junior said. “I know 5Ks are everywhere and for every cause imaginable, but we put a fun twist on it.”

Battle Creek junior Kellie Murphy said the run will be broken up by obstacles like a tire run and carrying an egg on a spoon.

“It freaks a lot of people out when they hear ‘5K,’ but it’s definitely laid back,” Murphy said,

All proceeds from the event will go to Special Olympics Michigan. Runners will meet at 10 a.m. at Finch Fieldhouse and the run will begin at 11 a.m.

People shouldn’t be intim-idated by the length of the event, Murphy said.

Fase and Murphy are working together as part of a small group for a class, RPL 340: Therapeutic Recreation: Developmental Disabilities. This is their final project for the course and they are hop-ing to make an impact with it.

Based on data from previ-ous years, the group is plan-ning to raise $300 with Dash for a Difference. They want to make a donation to Spe-cial Olympics Michigan, but also help spread awareness about the organization.

St. Johns sophomore Da-vid Presocki is also helping to organize the event, and said one of their goals is to have participants leave with new knowledge of Special

Olympics Michigan.“(We want to) offer a

unique run for our partici-pants as well as provide a chance to learn more about our charity,” Presocki said.

Registration is $15 and is open to the public until the event starts Saturday. The first 75 people to register will receive a free T-shirt. To reg-ister, visit the Dash for a Dis-tance website at dashforadif-ference.weebly.com or send an email to [email protected].

[email protected]

5K Saturday to benefit Special Olympics

Page 7: Oct. 21, 2011

Friday, Oct. 21, 2011|

cm-life.com

SPORTSCentral Michigan University [CM-LIFE.COM]

w Join Sports Editor John Manzo, Assistant Sports Editor Matt Thompson and Senior Reporter Justin Hicks for a live chat during the game

w Follow @MThompson25 on Twitter for instant updates of Saturday’s football game

FOOTBALL: Enos cites similarities

between Ball State, EMU, 9

w Video preview of CMU, BSU game

By Ryan ZukeStaff Reporter

One loss.That was it for the Central Mich-

igan women’s soccer team last sea-son in Mid-American Conference play.

And that one loss came against Toledo, the team it faces at 4 p.m. today.

The Rockets feature a trio of of-fensive players. Senior Kristen Lynn leads the team with eight goals followed by sophomores Ni-cole Gyurgyik (seven goals) and Rachel MacLeod (six goals).

Toledo is the only team in the MAC with three players registering at least 15 points.

Head coach Neil Stafford knows if the Chippewas capitalize on more of their scoring chances, then the game should have a favorable outcome.

“If we score two goals on a team, it is very difficult to see a team scor-ing three goals on us,” Stafford said.

But CMU will encounter a sti-fling Toledo defense which has allowed only four goals in MAC play, posting six shutouts in eight games.

BALL STATEThe Cardinals are coming off a

2-0 loss to Kent State Sunday and a scoreless tie against Buffalo on Oct. 14 and look to get back on track at 1 p.m. on Sunday against the Chippewas.

Freshman Jasmine Moses and junior Brigit Reder lead BSU in scoring. The two have seven and six goals respectively.

“We just need to put the teams un-der pressure and just play our game,” said senior d e f e n d e r Claire Horton.

The two games this weekend will be her last regular sea-son games played at the CMU Soccer Complex. But it did not take away her fo-cus from the importance of the upcoming matches.

“It means a lot because Toledo beat us last year so it’s kind of a revenge game and we want to keep our unbeaten streak at our home field,” Horton said.

Horton, along with seniors Chel-si Abbott, Bethany Allport and Liesel Toth, will be honored Sun-day for senior day.

Horton and Toth have started every match in their career — a stretch of 82 games.

The Chippewas unbeaten streak sits at 31 games and has not lost at home since Oct. 19, 2008 when it lost to Toledo 1-0. The Rockets lead the all-time series, 5-3-6.

CMU is 11-2-1 all-time against the Ball State.

[email protected]

CMU looks for revenge after last year’s loss to Toledo

Neil Stafford

UP NEXT

CMU (11-2-3, 5-1-2 MAC) vs Toledo (9-5-2, 7-0-1 MAC)

When: FridayTime: 4 p.m. Where: CMU Soccer Complex

CMU (11-2-3, 5-1-2 MAC) vs Ball State (9-5-3, 4-2-2 MAC)

When: SundayTime: 1 p.m. Where: CMU Soccer Complex

Team plays Ball State on Sunday in regular season home finale

ANDREW KUHN/ASSISTANT PHOTO EDITORJunior wide receiver Cody Wilson prays with teammates at Kelly/Shorts Stadium after morning practice Wednesday. Ryan Radcliff, A.J. Westendorp and Wilson led a His House service on Sept. 29.

Field of Faith

Football is more than just a game for Ryan Radcliff, Cody Wilson and A.J, Westendorp.

“Our intent is to use our platform as ath-letes to point to God and glorify God in what

he’s done in our lives,” Westendorp said.As popular as sports are in the world today, it’s com-

mon for people to fail to realize the other dimensions of athletes.

“As a football player, it’s something I like to do, but it’s not what defines me,” Wilson said. “With success, people start to look at you differently and one verse I really take to heart is John 3:30, ‘He must increase, I must decrease.’”

The bible verse hangs above Wilson’s locker, re-minding him of why he takes the field.

With the opportunity to reach larger crowds, being on that platform can be a tough responsibility.

“With that platform comes the fishbowl effect,” Radcliff said. “People have their eyes on you and you can either use it in a good way or in a bad way.”

Radcliff, Wilson, Westendorp embrace, spread their faithBy Justin Hicks | Senior Reporter

Radcliff was recruited by seven Mid-American Conference schools and picked CMU out of the crowd simply be-cause it felt right.

“Something was different here,” he said. “I know God had his hand on that and looking back I can definitely see that I’m here for a reason and I don’t think I would be where I am in my faith without having come to Central.”

Westendorp had a similar experience, stepping further into his faith when he arrived at CMU.

Building a relationship that wraps around God with Radcliff, Wilson and long snapper Brian Bennyhoff was a strong piece of the puzzle for the young quarterback, who was able to grow in faith at CMU.

“Coming to Central, some of the big things to shape my faith have been when I went on a mission trip to Atlanta and also leading bible study in the dorms with some of the guys,” he said. “We have been blessed to be able to do that.”

A NIGHT WITH THE CHIPPEWASHis House gave Radcliff, Wilson and

Westendorp, along with other Central Michigan athletes, an opportunity to lead a service known as A Night with the Chippewas on Sept. 29.

Radcliff opened the service by giving the offering and Westendorp led the mu-sical performance of the night around Wilson’s sermon.

“Honestly, it went better than we ex-pected,” Wilson said. “The music was great, the message came together and God really blessed that night and it was great to be a part of.”

Standing on stage in Plachta Audito-rium, Wilson spoke of the importance of resisting temptation to bend and his experiences in which he faced with such challenges.

“I was on the edge of my seat,” Radcliff said. “It felt like he was done in five min-utes and he did a heck of a job.”

The idea to have athletes lead the ser-vice came from a similar event the De-troit Lions put on each year.

As the Lions chaplain for 27 years Cody Wilson’s dad, David Wilson, is a

By Justin HicksSenior Reporter

Ball State marks the first stop of the Central Michigan football team’s second three-game road trip of the season at 2 p.m. Saturday at Scheu-mann Stadium in Muncie, Ind.

CMU hopes to have more success on this trip after finishing the last one 0-3 with losses coming against Kentucky, Western Michigan and Michigan State.

“We can’t worry about that,” said junior safety Jahleel Addae. “The only thing we can do is travel to the

destinations they give us and go out and play Chippewa football.”

The Chippewas are coming off a 35-28 loss to Eastern Michigan Sat-urday in which the Eagles rushed for 350 yards to crash CMU’s home-coming.

“Ball State is very similar in they have got two backs and two tight ends and they pound the ball,” said head coach Dan Enos. “The only dif-ference is (their quarterback) isn’t as good on the run, but he’s a better passer.”

Quarterback Keith Wenning, whose 184.1 yards per game ranks

eighth in the Mid-American Confer-ence, leads the Cardinal offense.

Quarterback Ryan Radcliff is ranked third in the conference, av-eraging 249.7 yards per game and throwing almost twice as many touchdowns as Wenning.

Radcliff has thrown to 17 differ-ent players this season. His favorite targets have been Cody Wilson (35 receptions), Jerry Harris (21 recep-tions) and David Blackburn (17 re-ceptions), though freshman Titus Davis and Courtney Williams have

Football team begins another three-game road trip A FAITH | 9

A ROAD | 9

UP NEXT

CMU (2-5, 1-2 MAC) @ Ball State (4-3, 2-1 MAC)

When: SaturdayTime: 2 p.m. Where: Scheumann Stadium, Muncie, Ind.

FILE PHOTO BY CHARLOTTE BODAKSophomore defensive specialist Jenna Coates serves the ball during a game against the Toledo Rockets Oct. 8 at McGuirk Arena.

By Kristopher LodesStaff Reporter

Confidence is high as the Central Michigan volleyball team comes home with a three-match winning streak.

And it will look for five-straight wins this weekend against Akron and Buffalo.

“A five-match winning streak would be huge for us,” said sopho-more setter Kelly Maxwell. “We’re so competitive in the Mid-American Conference and our division.”

The Chippewas have beaten To-

ledo, Bowling Green and Miami Uni-versity since their only home loss against Ball State two weeks ago.

A five-match win streak would be CMU’s longest streak since 2009, when they won six straight from Sept. 5-25.

The Chippewas start the weekend at 7 p.m. Friday against the Zips.

“I would’ve liked to play them a couple weeks ago,” said head coach Erik Olson. “They’re kind of like we were four weeks ago.”

Akron had three players with 10-plus skills in its loss against Western Michigan last Saturday.

BUFFALOIf CMU wants the five-match

winning streak, it needs to beat the

Volleyball aims to improve winning streak to five

A STREAK | 8

Senior middle blocker Kaitlyn Schultz expected to play

S O C C E R

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Page 8: Oct. 21, 2011

Enjoy traditional music concerts recorded around central and northern Michigan with your host John Sheffl er on

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8 || Friday, Oct. 21, 2011 || Central Michigan Life cm-life.com/category/sports[SPORTS]

Freeman leads the Cardinals defense in tack-les (65). He has a 34-yard inter-ception and one sack this season.

Reason to watch: He had four tackles last week, but he also recorded his first intercep-tion of the season. Look for him to be an enforcer for the Cardinals defense.

Edwards is the featured run-ning back in the Cardinals offense. He has almost double the carries that backup Bar-rington Scott has.

Reason to watch: Edwards rushed for 125 yards and a touchdown in last week’s 23-20 win against Ohio. Expect more against CMU’s defense.

The Cadinals are a balanced team and Wen-ning is the q u a r t e r b a c k who keeps the offense com-posed. He has completed 62.3 percent of his passes this sea-son.Reason to watch: Wenning man-aged last week’s win, passing for 179 yards. CMU could cause trouble because Wenning isn’t a scrambling QB.

P L A Y E R S T O W AT C HB A L L S TAT E C A R D I N A L S

Keith Wenning — QB Jahwan Edwards — RB Travis Freeman — MLB

C E N T R A L M I C H I G A N C H I P P E W A S

Ryan Radcliff — QB Paris Cotton — RB Cody Wilson — WR

GAME 8

Cardinals

OffensePos. No. Name ClassQB 10 Keith Wenning So.RB 38 Jahwan Edwards Fr. 33 Barrington Scott So. WR X 3 Willie Snead Fr.WR Z 1 Briggs Orsbon Sr. WR H 12 Torieal Gibson Sr. TE 88 Zane Fakes So.QT 77 Austin Holtz Jr.QG 79 Kitt O’Brien Jr.C 66 Kreg Hunter Sr.SG 70 Jordan Hansel So.RT 73 Dan Manick Jr.

DefensePos. No. Name ClassRE 44 Ryan Hartke Sr.DE 41 Andrew Puthoff Sr. DT 92 Nathan Ollie So.NT 99 Adam Morris Sr.SLB 15 Aaron Morris So.MLB 8 Travis Freeman Jr.WLB 47 Tony Martin Jr.BC 24 Jeffery Garrett So. 13 Armand Dehaney Jr.FC 6 Jason Pinkston Jr. 28 Andrew Dawson Jr. FS 20 Joshua Howard Sr. 23 Kyle Hoke Sr.SS 25 Sean Baker Sr. 29 Brian Jones Fr.

SpecialistsPos. No. Name ClassP 18 Scott Kovanda Jr.PK 14 Steven Schott Jr.

OffensePos. No. Name ClassQB 8 Ryan Radcliff Jr.RB 6 Paris Cotton Sr. 5 Tim Phillips So.WR 11 Cody Wilson Jr. 81 Jerry Harris Jr. 25 Courtney Williams Fr.TE 82 David Blackburn Sr.LT 79 Eric Fisher Jr.LG 67 Mike Repovz Jr.C 65 Darren Keyton Jr.RG 78 Rocky Weaver Sr. RT 73 Jake Olson Jr.

DefensePos. No. Name ClassDE 93 Joe Kinville Jr. 99 Caesar Rodriguez Jr.NG 50 Matt Losiniecki Fr.DT 55 Steve Winston Jr.MLB 59 Justin Cherocci Fr.WLB 32 Alex Smith Jr.SLB 22 Ryan Petro Fr.CB 2 Lorenzo White Jr. 40 John Carr Sr. 29 Jarret Chapman Fr. 28 Dennis Nalor Fr.FS 36 Avery Cunningham So. 10 Kevin King Fr.SS 4 Jahleel Addae Jr. 24 Leron Eaddy So.

SpecialistsPos. No. Name ClassP 13 Richie Hogan So.K 96 David Harman Jr.PR 11 Cody Wilson Jr.KR 84 Titus Davis Fr.

Chippewas

Radcliff had himself a rela-tively nice game against Eastern Michi-gan. He passed 50 times for 351 yards and three touch-downs in windy conditions.

Reason to watch: Radcliff can be successful against the Cardinals, but the team needs to establish a run. BSU is ranked second to last in the MAC in rushing defense.

Cotton will be the featured back early on in the game. If he can open up the field, CMU could have a field day.

Reason to watch: He is the x-factor of the game. He has rushed for the most yards on the team this season (304). Cotton is an explosive back who ha provided versatility for CMU.

Wilson is Mr. Consistent. He makes at least one catch a game and he leads this offense by ex-ample.

Reason to watch: He had nine catches for 103 yards in the 35-28 loss against EMU. His success is important for the team, but also for the freshman receivers who look up to him.

”Positive. We bleed maroon and gold and love each other, we’re gonna fi ght until the end.

Junior safety Jahleel Addae said on the team’s morale after the EMU loss.

Zips and Buffalo.The Bulls are on a four-

match losing streak and have been swept in their last two games.

“They serve tough and they’re huge,” Olson said. “We have to make sure we don’t run our offense into their big blockers.”

The job of directing the of-fense falls on the shoulders of Maxwell, who is ranked no. 67 in the nation in assists per game with an average of 10.48.

“I just need to find my open hitters and put them in good situations,” Maxwell said.

Junior Val DeWeerd has stepped up and performed well in the absence of the in-jured junior Jocelyn VerVelde,

but the starter is still uncer-tain.

“Val (DeWeerd) has been training real well and Jocelyn (VerVelde) has been getting better everyday,” Olson said. “Right now I’m undecided, we’ll see.”

Senior middle blocker Kait-lyn Schultz, who has been out of practice this week due to illness, is expected to play this weekend according to Olson.

This week marks the first of a two-week homestand and final one of the season.

“McGuirk has been awe-some,” Maxwell said. “Last year we were in Finch (Field-house) and it felt like we were always on the road.”

The MAC Championship race is starting to shape up toward the final month of the regular season. Ball State who leads CMU by two matches and Northern Illinois and

WMU are ahead by just one game.

The Chippewas host the Broncos and Huskies to close up McGuirk next weekend.

[email protected]

UP NEXT

CMU (12-7, 5-3 MAC) vs Akron (4-17, 1-7 MAC)

When: FridayTime: 7 p.m. Where: McGuirk Arena

CMU (12-7, 5-3 MAC) vs Buffalo (9-13, 2-6 MAC)

When: SaturdayTime: 7 p.m. Where: McGuirk Arena

STREAK|CONTINUED FROM 7

Page 9: Oct. 21, 2011

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cm-life.com/category/sports[SPORTS]

Central Michigan Life || Friday, Oct. 21, 2011 || 9

stepped up as of late.“Titus and Courtney and

Anthony Garland; they’re tak-ing some of the load off the older guys and giving us some more depth,” Radcliff said. “The team is really rallying to-gether.”

The young offense looks to rip through a BSU defense that ranks last in the MAC in total defense and pass defense. Its rush defense ranks 12th and its points allowed per game ranks 10th.

“We’re going to take the same mindset,” Enos said. “We’re go-ing to try and run the ball and keep our defense off the field as much as we can. We try to be balanced and at the end of the day, you’ve got to run the ball.”

BSU came out on top of the last meeting, pulling out a 31-17 victory. CMU looks to win its fourth-straight game in Mun-cie, the last one coming in 2009 via a 35-3 beating.

All-time, CMU leads the se-ries 22-20-1 against the Cardi-nals.

INJURIESAs previously injured players

are working their way into the lineup, CMU continues to be hit with roster inconsistency.

Senior running back Paris Cotton is a game time deci-sion after suffering an injury that held him to four touches against EMU.

“(Cotton) didn’t look very good yesterday, but he looked

much better today,” Enos said at practice Wednesday. “I’d say he’s probable to questionable right now.”

Garland and sophomore Tim Phillips would earn the call on the majority of carries if the se-nior is unable to suit up. Enos said Garland is looking to erase his previous performance.

“I thought Anthony Garland didn’t play as well last week as he has,” he said. “That’s just what’s going to happen when you’re dealing with young guys. Anthony is chomping at the bit to play this Saturday — he’s not happy with how he played last week.”

The linebacker core has been the most banged-up position this season for the Chippewas, though senior Armond Staten, junior Alex Smith and freshman Cody Lopez will all be back in the lineup this week.

Senior captain Mike Petrucci will be sidelined and Enos said his injury is going to be evalu-ated week by week.

Placekicker Connor Gagnon suffered an injury to his foot last week and Enos has ruled him out against BSU, leaving the kickoff responsibilities to David Harman, who has handled the field goal kicking this season.

Enos didn’t have much to say about the players whose status-es have recently changed with the program.

“(Staten) is back, I think he’s listed as the two (at linebacker),” Enos said. “Jake Bentley has left the team and Cedric Fraser is not practicing with us right now.”

[email protected]

ROAD | CONTINUED FROM 7

part of A Night with the Lions, which draws a crowd that usu-ally doesn’t come to church.

“We have a really good crowd on Wednesday nights, but it always triples when we have the Night with the Lions,” David said. “I think the reason people come is that they’re in-terested in knowing something about these guys off the field.”

CHEMISTRYAs the team’s top two quar-

terbacks and number one wide receiver, the trio has to have chemistry on offense and hav-ing faith to lean on strengthens that bond.

“There’s a depth to our friendship that I don’t feel like most friendships have,” Cody said. “We’re really close spiri-tually and I think that enters a deep level in a friendship.”

The religious side of the team expands past the three offensive weapons though.

Several other players on the team join Radcliff, Westen-dorp and Wilson after practice

to take part in prayer before heading into the locker room.

“It’s awesome to have all those guys, just to hold you ac-countable,” Radcliff said. “You can do it on your own for a while, but at some point some-thing is going to get you and make you bend or break.”

Like his father, Wilson plans to speak about his faith after his football career ends.

“It’s something I want to do with my life after football,” Cody said. “My parents are probably the best examples I’ve ever been given on how to live life and who I want to be like.”

Cody’s father has been in the ministry for 35 years. In his time he’s seen preachers both good and bad, and said Cody is a natural.

“I could have never done that at 20 years old,” David said. “Being humorous and powerful and teaching the word and being relevant and practical and challenging all at the same time. He has a gift and what God does with it will be interesting to watch.”

[email protected]

FAITH | CONTINUED FROM 7

By Matt Thompson Assistant Sports Editor

Last week Eastern Michi-gan rushed for 350 yards.

Central Michigan expects more teams to try to do the same.

“The blueprint’s been set,” said CMU head coach Dan Enos.

The scary thing for the Chippewas is Ball State runs an offense that resembles Eastern Michigan. The Cardi-nals are big and they run.

“After being ran on a lot last week, they’re going to try to run the ball,” said CMU junior safety Jahleel Addae.

“The defensive line has to penetrate and cause havoc in the backfield.”

Jahwan Edwards is Ball State’s leading rusher. He’s a 5-foot-10, 232-pound true freshman, rushing for 543 yards and seven touch-downs.

“Ball State is very similar (to EMU),” Enos said. “They have two backs and two tight ends. They pound the ball, they’re very physical. Their offensive line is very good and they have a big back.”

One difference between BSU and EMU is the dual-threat quarterback. EMU has one, the Cardinals don’t.

“This guy isn’t quite as good as a runner, but I think he’s a better passer,” Enos said. “With all that run, there’s going to be some play-action that our second-ary will have to account for.”

BSU is similar to EMU on defense as well.

“They’re pretty similar to Eastern,” said CMU quar-terback Ryan Radcliff. “They do little stuff differently, like certain blitzes with different coverages behind.”

The Cardinals have al-lowed the most passing yards (244.3 yards per game) in the Mid-American Conference so far. The rush defense is

second-worst in the confer-ence allowing 216.7 ypg.

“While my gut tells me CMU would like to stay bal-anced, I’d be surprised if they don’t challenge us often through the air this week,” said Ball State head coach Pete Lembo.

Enos said this week he’d like to stay balanced, as he has all year, but noted if CMU can take advantage through the air, they obviously would. His quarterback agreed.

“Hopefully we can go out there and exploit their weak-nesses,” Radcliff said.

[email protected]

Ball State expected to be similar to EMU offensively, defensively

Page 10: Oct. 21, 2011

10 || Friday, Oct. 21, 2011 || Central Michigan Life www.cm-life.com/category/classifi ed

Classifi edsCentral Michigan Life • 436 Moore Hall, CMU, Mt. Pleasant, MI 48859 • www/cm-life.com

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Show”4 Bearded bovine5 Conditionally give6 Intestinal sections7 Change, in sci-fi 8 Casual eatery9 Sunday number10 Hyde’s birthplace?11 Sailor’s back?12 Old copy13 ‘60s Green Bay hero Bart18 Did a croupier’s job22 Discarded25 Venezuelan herder27 Game with melding28 Marine retreats?29 Put __ on: limit30 Chair patter’s words31 Milk source34 Day __36 Catch sight of37 ‘80s-’90s ace Hershiser38 Frosted41 Bottom line for stockholders, briefl y44 Juice

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Classifi edsCentral Michigan Life • 436 Moore Hall, CMU, Mt. Pleasant, MI 48859 • www/cm-life.com

REACH MORE THAN 32,000 READERS EACH PUBLISHING DAY! ALWAYS OPEN AT WWW.CM-LIFE.COM/CLASSIFIEDS

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By Phone: 989-774-3493By Fax: 989-774-7805By Website: www.cm-life.comIn Person: 436 Moore Hall Hours: Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-5 p.m.

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Classifi edsCentral Michigan Life • 436 Moore Hall, CMU, Mt. Pleasant, MI 48859 • www/cm-life.com

REACH MORE THAN 32,000 READERS EACH PUBLISHING DAY! ALWAYS OPEN AT WWW.CM-LIFE.COM/CLASSIFIEDS

CM Life will not knowingly accept advertising which refl ects discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex or national origin, and CM Life reserves the right to reject or discontinue, without notice, advertising which is in the opinion of the Student Media Board, is not in keeping with the standards of CM Life. CM Life will be responsible for typographical errors only to the extent of cancelling the charge for the space used and rendered valueless by such an error. Credit for such an error is limited to only the fi rst date of publication. Any credit due can be picked up at the CM Life offi ce within 30 days of termination of the ad. If you fi nd an error, report it to the Classifi ed Dept. immediately. We are only responsible for the fi rst day’s insertion.

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By Phone: 989-774-3493By Fax: 989-774-7805By Website: www.cm-life.comIn Person: 436 Moore Hall Hours: Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-5 p.m.

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WANTED TO BUY

FOR SALE

AUTOS FOR SALE

HELP WANTED

SPECIAL SECTION

TRAVEL

PERSONALS

HAPPY ADS

WANTED TO RENT

SERVICES

GARAGE SALES

PETS

YARD SALE

1 BEDROOM INCLUDES water, trash,electric and gas; washer/ dryer. $600.989-621-0052.

1 LARGE 2 bedroom 1.5 bath duplex.Quiet area. Patio deck and fencedyard. Washer/ dryer/ dishwasher. Cen-tral AC. Available October 24th. $740p e r m o n t h . 7 7 2 - 1 0 6 1 [email protected]

2 - 5 bedroom houses/apartmentsleasing 2012/ 2013 starting $255each. Walk to campus. (Some freecable, internet) Washer/ dryer, dish-washer. Locally family owned.989-772-9577.

2-2 BEDROOM NON-SMOKINGHOUSES available on attractivelylandscaped property. Utilities andhorseboarding not inc [email protected].

4 BEDROOM HOUSE near highschool and CMU. 1028 S. Elizabeth$700 monthly plus utilities. Two peopleor a family. 989-631-8273.

AVAILABLE NOW: APARTMENTSnear Mt. Pleasant. $350- $450 in-cludes water and trash. Partlo Prop-erty Management. www.partloprop-erty.com 989-779-9886.

AVAILABLE NOW: TWO BEDROOMHOUSES. In Mt. Pleasant and nearCMU. Starting at $550. Partlo PropertyManagement. www.partloproperty.com989-779-9886.

DOWNTOWN, 2 BEDROOM loft apart-ment, 20 foot brick walls, all amenities.Year lease. Available May 20.989-444-1944.

MALE ROOMMATE WANTED for niceapartment. Very close to CMU. Freecable/ internet. 989-773-0785

WALK TO CAMPUS. Small, clean 2bedroom house. Stove, refrigerator,washer, dryer. References, no smok-ing, no pets, lease. 989-828-5425.

Dice!s Auto Scrap. UNWANTED VEHI-CLES we buy them we haul them.989-772-5428.

DANCERS WANTED. NO EXPERI-ENCE NECESSARY. PART TIMEONLY. HIGH EARNING POTENTIAL.APPLY AT MICELI!S CORNER.989-539-3401 AFTER 6 PM. face-book.com/micelis.corner.showgirls.

NEW SALON HIRING all positions.Send resume 811 East Bennett, Mt.P leasant . A t ten t ion L insay [email protected]

CONDO, 2 BEDROOM 2.5 bath. Fin-ished basement. No repairs needed.Near campus. $112,300. RealtorDawn Krantz. 989-620-4143.

Classifi edsCentral Michigan Life • 436 Moore Hall, CMU, Mt. Pleasant, MI 48859 • www/cm-life.com

REACH MORE THAN 32,000 READERS EACH PUBLISHING DAY! ALWAYS OPEN AT WWW.CM-LIFE.COM/CLASSIFIEDS

CM Life will not knowingly accept advertising which refl ects discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex or national origin, and CM Life reserves the right to reject or discontinue, without notice, advertising which is in the opinion of the Student Media Board, is not in keeping with the standards of CM Life. CM Life will be responsible for typographical errors only to the extent of cancelling the charge for the space used and rendered valueless by such an error. Credit for such an error is limited to only the fi rst date of publication. Any credit due can be picked up at the CM Life offi ce within 30 days of termination of the ad. If you fi nd an error, report it to the Classifi ed Dept. immediately. We are only responsible for the fi rst day’s insertion.

Placing a Classifi ed Ad Classifi ed Ad Policy & Rates

By Phone: 989-774-3493By Fax: 989-774-7805By Website: www.cm-life.comIn Person: 436 Moore Hall Hours: Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-5 p.m.

Rates: 15 word minimum per classifi ed ad

1-2 Issues: $7.75 per issue 3-6 Issues: $7.50 per issue 7-12 Issues: $7.25 per issue 13+ Issues: $7.00 per issue

Bold, italic and centered type are available along with other special features like ad attractors.

Classifi edsCentral Michigan Life • 436 Moore Hall, CMU, Mt. Pleasant, MI 48859 • www/cm-life.com

REACH MORE THAN 32,000 READERS EACH PUBLISHING DAY! ALWAYS OPEN AT WWW.CM-LIFE.COM/CLASSIFIEDS

CM Life will not knowingly accept advertising which refl ects discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex or national origin, and CM Life reserves the right to reject or discontinue, without notice, advertising which is in the opinion of the Student Media Board, is not in keeping with the standards of CM Life. CM Life will be responsible for typographical errors only to the extent of cancelling the charge for the space used and rendered valueless by such an error. Credit for such an error is limited to only the fi rst date of publication. Any credit due can be picked up at the CM Life offi ce within 30 days of termination of the ad. If you fi nd an error, report it to the Classifi ed Dept. immediately. We are only responsible for the fi rst day’s insertion.

Placing a Classifi ed Ad Classifi ed Ad Policy

By Phone: 989-774-3493By Fax: 989-774-7805By Website: www.cm-life.comIn Person: 436 Moore Hall Hours: Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-5 p.m.

Rates: 15 word minimum per classifi ed ad

1-2 Issues: $7.75 per issue 3-6 Issues: $7.50 per issue 7-12 Issues: $7.25 per issue 13+ Issues: $7.00 per issue

Bold, italic and centered type are

available along with other special features

like ad attractors.

Classifi ed Ad Rates

NOTICES

LOST & FOUND

FOR RENT

WANTED TO RENT

ROOMMATES

REAL ESTATE

WANTED TO BUY

FOR SALE

AUTOS FOR SALE

HELP WANTED

SPECIAL SECTION

TRAVEL

PERSONALS

HAPPY ADS

WANTED TO RENT

SERVICES

GARAGE SALES

PETS

MOTORCYCLES

NOTICES

LOST & FOUND

FOR RENT

WANTED TO RENT

ROOMMATES

REAL ESTATE

WANTED TO BUY

FOR SALE

AUTOS FOR SALE

HELP WANTED

SPECIAL SECTION

TRAVEL

PERSONALS

HAPPY ADS

WANTED TO RENT

SERVICES

GARAGE SALES

PETS

YARD SALE

Classifi edsCentral Michigan Life • 436 Moore Hall, CMU, Mt. Pleasant, MI 48859 • www/cm-life.com

REACH MORE THAN 32,000 READERS EACH PUBLISHING DAY! ALWAYS OPEN AT WWW.CM-LIFE.COM/CLASSIFIEDS

CM Life will not knowingly accept advertising which refl ects discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex or national origin, and CM Life reserves the right to reject or discontinue, without notice, advertising which is in the opinion of the Student Media Board, is not in keeping with the standards of CM Life. CM Life will be responsible for typographical errors only to the extent of cancelling the charge for the space used and rendered valueless by such an error. Credit for such an error is limited to only the fi rst date of publication. Any credit due can be picked up at the CM Life offi ce within 30 days of termination of the ad. If you fi nd an error, report it to the Classifi ed Dept. immediately. We are only responsible for the fi rst day’s insertion.

Placing a Classifi ed Ad Classifi ed Ad Policy & Rates

By Phone: 989-774-3493By Fax: 989-774-7805By Website: www.cm-life.comIn Person: 436 Moore Hall Hours: Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-5 p.m.

Rates: 15 word minimum per classifi ed ad

1-2 Issues: $7.75 per issue 3-6 Issues: $7.50 per issue 7-12 Issues: $7.25 per issue 13+ Issues: $7.00 per issue

Bold, italic and centered type are available along with other special features like ad attractors.

Classifi edsCentral Michigan Life • 436 Moore Hall, CMU, Mt. Pleasant, MI 48859 • www/cm-life.com

REACH MORE THAN 32,000 READERS EACH PUBLISHING DAY! ALWAYS OPEN AT WWW.CM-LIFE.COM/CLASSIFIEDS

CM Life will not knowingly accept advertising which refl ects discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex or national origin, and CM Life reserves the right to reject or discontinue, without notice, advertising which is in the opinion of the Student Media Board, is not in keeping with the standards of CM Life. CM Life will be responsible for typographical errors only to the extent of cancelling the charge for the space used and rendered valueless by such an error. Credit for such an error is limited to only the fi rst date of publication. Any credit due can be picked up at the CM Life offi ce within 30 days of termination of the ad. If you fi nd an error, report it to the Classifi ed Dept. immediately. We are only responsible for the fi rst day’s insertion.

Placing a Classifi ed Ad Classifi ed Ad Policy

By Phone: 989-774-3493By Fax: 989-774-7805By Website: www.cm-life.comIn Person: 436 Moore Hall Hours: Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-5 p.m.

Rates: 15 word minimum per classifi ed ad

1-2 Issues: $7.75 per issue 3-6 Issues: $7.50 per issue 7-12 Issues: $7.25 per issue 13+ Issues: $7.00 per issue

Bold, italic and centered type are

available along with other special features

like ad attractors.

Classifi ed Ad Rates

NOTICES

LOST & FOUND

FOR RENT

WANTED TO RENT

ROOMMATES

REAL ESTATE

WANTED TO BUY

FOR SALE

AUTOS FOR SALE

HELP WANTED

SPECIAL SECTION

TRAVEL

PERSONALS

HAPPY ADS

WANTED TO RENT

SERVICES

GARAGE SALES

PETS

MOTORCYCLES

NOTICES

LOST & FOUND

FOR RENT

WANTED TO RENT

ROOMMATES

REAL ESTATE

WANTED TO BUY

FOR SALE

AUTOS FOR SALE

HELP WANTED

SPECIAL SECTION

TRAVEL

PERSONALS

HAPPY ADS

WANTED TO RENT

SERVICES

GARAGE SALES

PETS

YARD SALE

Classifi edsCentral Michigan Life • 436 Moore Hall, CMU, Mt. Pleasant, MI 48859 • www/cm-life.com

REACH MORE THAN 32,000 READERS EACH PUBLISHING DAY! ALWAYS OPEN AT WWW.CM-LIFE.COM/CLASSIFIEDS

CM Life will not knowingly accept advertising which refl ects discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex or national origin, and CM Life reserves the right to reject or discontinue, without notice, advertising which is in the opinion of the Student Media Board, is not in keeping with the standards of CM Life. CM Life will be responsible for typographical errors only to the extent of cancelling the charge for the space used and rendered valueless by such an error. Credit for such an error is limited to only the fi rst date of publication. Any credit due can be picked up at the CM Life offi ce within 30 days of termination of the ad. If you fi nd an error, report it to the Classifi ed Dept. immediately. We are only responsible for the fi rst day’s insertion.

Placing a Classifi ed Ad Classifi ed Ad Policy & Rates

By Phone: 989-774-3493By Fax: 989-774-7805By Website: www.cm-life.comIn Person: 436 Moore Hall Hours: Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-5 p.m.

Rates: 15 word minimum per classifi ed ad

1-2 Issues: $7.75 per issue 3-6 Issues: $7.50 per issue 7-12 Issues: $7.25 per issue 13+ Issues: $7.00 per issue

Bold, italic and centered type are available along with other special features like ad attractors.

Classifi edsCentral Michigan Life • 436 Moore Hall, CMU, Mt. Pleasant, MI 48859 • www/cm-life.com

REACH MORE THAN 32,000 READERS EACH PUBLISHING DAY! ALWAYS OPEN AT WWW.CM-LIFE.COM/CLASSIFIEDS

CM Life will not knowingly accept advertising which refl ects discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex or national origin, and CM Life reserves the right to reject or discontinue, without notice, advertising which is in the opinion of the Student Media Board, is not in keeping with the standards of CM Life. CM Life will be responsible for typographical errors only to the extent of cancelling the charge for the space used and rendered valueless by such an error. Credit for such an error is limited to only the fi rst date of publication. Any credit due can be picked up at the CM Life offi ce within 30 days of termination of the ad. If you fi nd an error, report it to the Classifi ed Dept. immediately. We are only responsible for the fi rst day’s insertion.

Placing a Classifi ed Ad Classifi ed Ad Policy

By Phone: 989-774-3493By Fax: 989-774-7805By Website: www.cm-life.comIn Person: 436 Moore Hall Hours: Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-5 p.m.

Rates: 15 word minimum per classifi ed ad

1-2 Issues: $7.75 per issue 3-6 Issues: $7.50 per issue 7-12 Issues: $7.25 per issue 13+ Issues: $7.00 per issue

Bold, italic and centered type are

available along with other special features

like ad attractors.

Classifi ed Ad Rates

NOTICES

LOST & FOUND

FOR RENT

WANTED TO RENT

ROOMMATES

REAL ESTATE

WANTED TO BUY

FOR SALE

AUTOS FOR SALE

HELP WANTED

SPECIAL SECTION

TRAVEL

PERSONALS

HAPPY ADS

WANTED TO RENT

SERVICES

GARAGE SALES

PETS

MOTORCYCLES

NOTICES

LOST & FOUND

FOR RENT

WANTED TO RENT

ROOMMATES

REAL ESTATE

WANTED TO BUY

FOR SALE

AUTOS FOR SALE

HELP WANTED

SPECIAL SECTION

TRAVEL

PERSONALS

HAPPY ADS

WANTED TO RENT

SERVICES

GARAGE SALES

PETS

YARD SALE

Classifi edsCentral Michigan Life • 436 Moore Hall, CMU, Mt. Pleasant, MI 48859 • www/cm-life.com

REACH MORE THAN 32,000 READERS EACH PUBLISHING DAY! ALWAYS OPEN AT WWW.CM-LIFE.COM/CLASSIFIEDS

CM Life will not knowingly accept advertising which refl ects discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex or national origin, and CM Life reserves the right to reject or discontinue, without notice, advertising which is in the opinion of the Student Media Board, is not in keeping with the standards of CM Life. CM Life will be responsible for typographical errors only to the extent of cancelling the charge for the space used and rendered valueless by such an error. Credit for such an error is limited to only the fi rst date of publication. Any credit due can be picked up at the CM Life offi ce within 30 days of termination of the ad. If you fi nd an error, report it to the Classifi ed Dept. immediately. We are only responsible for the fi rst day’s insertion.

Placing a Classifi ed Ad Classifi ed Ad Policy & Rates

By Phone: 989-774-3493By Fax: 989-774-7805By Website: www.cm-life.comIn Person: 436 Moore Hall Hours: Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-5 p.m.

Rates: 15 word minimum per classifi ed ad

1-2 Issues: $7.75 per issue 3-6 Issues: $7.50 per issue 7-12 Issues: $7.25 per issue 13+ Issues: $7.00 per issue

Bold, italic and centered type are available along with other special features like ad attractors.

Classifi edsCentral Michigan Life • 436 Moore Hall, CMU, Mt. Pleasant, MI 48859 • www/cm-life.com

REACH MORE THAN 32,000 READERS EACH PUBLISHING DAY! ALWAYS OPEN AT WWW.CM-LIFE.COM/CLASSIFIEDS

CM Life will not knowingly accept advertising which refl ects discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex or national origin, and CM Life reserves the right to reject or discontinue, without notice, advertising which is in the opinion of the Student Media Board, is not in keeping with the standards of CM Life. CM Life will be responsible for typographical errors only to the extent of cancelling the charge for the space used and rendered valueless by such an error. Credit for such an error is limited to only the fi rst date of publication. Any credit due can be picked up at the CM Life offi ce within 30 days of termination of the ad. If you fi nd an error, report it to the Classifi ed Dept. immediately. We are only responsible for the fi rst day’s insertion.

Placing a Classifi ed Ad Classifi ed Ad Policy

By Phone: 989-774-3493By Fax: 989-774-7805By Website: www.cm-life.comIn Person: 436 Moore Hall Hours: Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-5 p.m.

Rates: 15 word minimum per classifi ed ad

1-2 Issues: $7.75 per issue 3-6 Issues: $7.50 per issue 7-12 Issues: $7.25 per issue 13+ Issues: $7.00 per issue

Bold, italic and centered type are

available along with other special features

like ad attractors.

Classifi ed Ad Rates

NOTICES

LOST & FOUND

FOR RENT

WANTED TO RENT

ROOMMATES

REAL ESTATE

WANTED TO BUY

FOR SALE

AUTOS FOR SALE

HELP WANTED

SPECIAL SECTION

TRAVEL

PERSONALS

HAPPY ADS

WANTED TO RENT

SERVICES

GARAGE SALES

PETS

MOTORCYCLES

NOTICES

LOST & FOUND

FOR RENT

WANTED TO RENT

ROOMMATES

REAL ESTATE

WANTED TO BUY

FOR SALE

AUTOS FOR SALE

HELP WANTED

SPECIAL SECTION

TRAVEL

PERSONALS

HAPPY ADS

WANTED TO RENT

SERVICES

GARAGE SALES

PETS

YARD SALE

Classifi edsCentral Michigan Life • 436 Moore Hall, CMU, Mt. Pleasant, MI 48859 • www/cm-life.com

REACH MORE THAN 32,000 READERS EACH PUBLISHING DAY! ALWAYS OPEN AT WWW.CM-LIFE.COM/CLASSIFIEDS

CM Life will not knowingly accept advertising which refl ects discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex or national origin, and CM Life reserves the right to reject or discontinue, without notice, advertising which is in the opinion of the Student Media Board, is not in keeping with the standards of CM Life. CM Life will be responsible for typographical errors only to the extent of cancelling the charge for the space used and rendered valueless by such an error. Credit for such an error is limited to only the fi rst date of publication. Any credit due can be picked up at the CM Life offi ce within 30 days of termination of the ad. If you fi nd an error, report it to the Classifi ed Dept. immediately. We are only responsible for the fi rst day’s insertion.

Placing a Classifi ed Ad Classifi ed Ad Policy & Rates

By Phone: 989-774-3493By Fax: 989-774-7805By Website: www.cm-life.comIn Person: 436 Moore Hall Hours: Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-5 p.m.

Rates: 15 word minimum per classifi ed ad

1-2 Issues: $7.75 per issue 3-6 Issues: $7.50 per issue 7-12 Issues: $7.25 per issue 13+ Issues: $7.00 per issue

Bold, italic and centered type are available along with other special features like ad attractors.

Classifi edsCentral Michigan Life • 436 Moore Hall, CMU, Mt. Pleasant, MI 48859 • www/cm-life.com

REACH MORE THAN 32,000 READERS EACH PUBLISHING DAY! ALWAYS OPEN AT WWW.CM-LIFE.COM/CLASSIFIEDS

CM Life will not knowingly accept advertising which refl ects discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex or national origin, and CM Life reserves the right to reject or discontinue, without notice, advertising which is in the opinion of the Student Media Board, is not in keeping with the standards of CM Life. CM Life will be responsible for typographical errors only to the extent of cancelling the charge for the space used and rendered valueless by such an error. Credit for such an error is limited to only the fi rst date of publication. Any credit due can be picked up at the CM Life offi ce within 30 days of termination of the ad. If you fi nd an error, report it to the Classifi ed Dept. immediately. We are only responsible for the fi rst day’s insertion.

Placing a Classifi ed Ad Classifi ed Ad Policy

By Phone: 989-774-3493By Fax: 989-774-7805By Website: www.cm-life.comIn Person: 436 Moore Hall Hours: Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-5 p.m.

Rates: 15 word minimum per classifi ed ad

1-2 Issues: $7.75 per issue 3-6 Issues: $7.50 per issue 7-12 Issues: $7.25 per issue 13+ Issues: $7.00 per issue

Bold, italic and centered type are

available along with other special features

like ad attractors.

Classifi ed Ad Rates

NOTICES

LOST & FOUND

FOR RENT

WANTED TO RENT

ROOMMATES

REAL ESTATE

WANTED TO BUY

FOR SALE

AUTOS FOR SALE

HELP WANTED

SPECIAL SECTION

TRAVEL

PERSONALS

HAPPY ADS

WANTED TO RENT

SERVICES

GARAGE SALES

PETS

MOTORCYCLES

NOTICES

LOST & FOUND

FOR RENT

WANTED TO RENT

ROOMMATES

REAL ESTATE

WANTED TO BUY

FOR SALE

AUTOS FOR SALE

HELP WANTED

SPECIAL SECTION

TRAVEL

PERSONALS

HAPPY ADS

WANTED TO RENT

SERVICES

GARAGE SALES

PETS

YARD SALE

Classifi edsCentral Michigan Life • 436 Moore Hall, CMU, Mt. Pleasant, MI 48859 • www/cm-life.com

REACH MORE THAN 32,000 READERS EACH PUBLISHING DAY! ALWAYS OPEN AT WWW.CM-LIFE.COM/CLASSIFIEDS

CM Life will not knowingly accept advertising which refl ects discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex or national origin, and CM Life reserves the right to reject or discontinue, without notice, advertising which is in the opinion of the Student Media Board, is not in keeping with the standards of CM Life. CM Life will be responsible for typographical errors only to the extent of cancelling the charge for the space used and rendered valueless by such an error. Credit for such an error is limited to only the fi rst date of publication. Any credit due can be picked up at the CM Life offi ce within 30 days of termination of the ad. If you fi nd an error, report it to the Classifi ed Dept. immediately. We are only responsible for the fi rst day’s insertion.

Placing a Classifi ed Ad Classifi ed Ad Policy & Rates

By Phone: 989-774-3493By Fax: 989-774-7805By Website: www.cm-life.comIn Person: 436 Moore Hall Hours: Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-5 p.m.

Rates: 15 word minimum per classifi ed ad

1-2 Issues: $7.75 per issue 3-6 Issues: $7.50 per issue 7-12 Issues: $7.25 per issue 13+ Issues: $7.00 per issue

Bold, italic and centered type are available along with other special features like ad attractors.

Classifi edsCentral Michigan Life • 436 Moore Hall, CMU, Mt. Pleasant, MI 48859 • www/cm-life.com

REACH MORE THAN 32,000 READERS EACH PUBLISHING DAY! ALWAYS OPEN AT WWW.CM-LIFE.COM/CLASSIFIEDS

CM Life will not knowingly accept advertising which refl ects discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex or national origin, and CM Life reserves the right to reject or discontinue, without notice, advertising which is in the opinion of the Student Media Board, is not in keeping with the standards of CM Life. CM Life will be responsible for typographical errors only to the extent of cancelling the charge for the space used and rendered valueless by such an error. Credit for such an error is limited to only the fi rst date of publication. Any credit due can be picked up at the CM Life offi ce within 30 days of termination of the ad. If you fi nd an error, report it to the Classifi ed Dept. immediately. We are only responsible for the fi rst day’s insertion.

Placing a Classifi ed Ad Classifi ed Ad Policy

By Phone: 989-774-3493By Fax: 989-774-7805By Website: www.cm-life.comIn Person: 436 Moore Hall Hours: Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-5 p.m.

Rates: 15 word minimum per classifi ed ad

1-2 Issues: $7.75 per issue 3-6 Issues: $7.50 per issue 7-12 Issues: $7.25 per issue 13+ Issues: $7.00 per issue

Bold, italic and centered type are

available along with other special features

like ad attractors.

Classifi ed Ad Rates

NOTICES

LOST & FOUND

FOR RENT

WANTED TO RENT

ROOMMATES

REAL ESTATE

WANTED TO BUY

FOR SALE

AUTOS FOR SALE

HELP WANTED

SPECIAL SECTION

TRAVEL

PERSONALS

HAPPY ADS

WANTED TO RENT

SERVICES

GARAGE SALES

PETS

MOTORCYCLES

NOTICES

LOST & FOUND

FOR RENT

WANTED TO RENT

ROOMMATES

REAL ESTATE

WANTED TO BUY

FOR SALE

AUTOS FOR SALE

HELP WANTED

SPECIAL SECTION

TRAVEL

PERSONALS

HAPPY ADS

WANTED TO RENT

SERVICES

GARAGE SALES

PETS

YARD SALE

Classifi edsCentral Michigan Life • 436 Moore Hall, CMU, Mt. Pleasant, MI 48859 • www/cm-life.com

REACH MORE THAN 32,000 READERS EACH PUBLISHING DAY! ALWAYS OPEN AT WWW.CM-LIFE.COM/CLASSIFIEDS

CM Life will not knowingly accept advertising which refl ects discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex or national origin, and CM Life reserves the right to reject or discontinue, without notice, advertising which is in the opinion of the Student Media Board, is not in keeping with the standards of CM Life. CM Life will be responsible for typographical errors only to the extent of cancelling the charge for the space used and rendered valueless by such an error. Credit for such an error is limited to only the fi rst date of publication. Any credit due can be picked up at the CM Life offi ce within 30 days of termination of the ad. If you fi nd an error, report it to the Classifi ed Dept. immediately. We are only responsible for the fi rst day’s insertion.

Placing a Classifi ed Ad Classifi ed Ad Policy & Rates

By Phone: 989-774-3493By Fax: 989-774-7805By Website: www.cm-life.comIn Person: 436 Moore Hall Hours: Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-5 p.m.

Rates: 15 word minimum per classifi ed ad

1-2 Issues: $7.75 per issue 3-6 Issues: $7.50 per issue 7-12 Issues: $7.25 per issue 13+ Issues: $7.00 per issue

Bold, italic and centered type are available along with other special features like ad attractors.

Classifi edsCentral Michigan Life • 436 Moore Hall, CMU, Mt. Pleasant, MI 48859 • www/cm-life.com

REACH MORE THAN 32,000 READERS EACH PUBLISHING DAY! ALWAYS OPEN AT WWW.CM-LIFE.COM/CLASSIFIEDS

CM Life will not knowingly accept advertising which refl ects discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex or national origin, and CM Life reserves the right to reject or discontinue, without notice, advertising which is in the opinion of the Student Media Board, is not in keeping with the standards of CM Life. CM Life will be responsible for typographical errors only to the extent of cancelling the charge for the space used and rendered valueless by such an error. Credit for such an error is limited to only the fi rst date of publication. Any credit due can be picked up at the CM Life offi ce within 30 days of termination of the ad. If you fi nd an error, report it to the Classifi ed Dept. immediately. We are only responsible for the fi rst day’s insertion.

Placing a Classifi ed Ad Classifi ed Ad Policy

By Phone: 989-774-3493By Fax: 989-774-7805By Website: www.cm-life.comIn Person: 436 Moore Hall Hours: Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-5 p.m.

Rates: 15 word minimum per classifi ed ad

1-2 Issues: $7.75 per issue 3-6 Issues: $7.50 per issue 7-12 Issues: $7.25 per issue 13+ Issues: $7.00 per issue

Bold, italic and centered type are

available along with other special features

like ad attractors.

Classifi ed Ad Rates

NOTICES

LOST & FOUND

FOR RENT

WANTED TO RENT

ROOMMATES

REAL ESTATE

WANTED TO BUY

FOR SALE

AUTOS FOR SALE

HELP WANTED

SPECIAL SECTION

TRAVEL

PERSONALS

HAPPY ADS

WANTED TO RENT

SERVICES

GARAGE SALES

PETS

MOTORCYCLES

NOTICES

LOST & FOUND

FOR RENT

WANTED TO RENT

ROOMMATES

REAL ESTATE

WANTED TO BUY

FOR SALE

AUTOS FOR SALE

HELP WANTED

SPECIAL SECTION

TRAVEL

PERSONALS

HAPPY ADS

WANTED TO RENT

SERVICES

GARAGE SALES

PETS

YARD SALE

RECYCLE YOUR ITEMS that you no lon-ger need and gain $$ and space!CM Life Classifieds • 774-3493

436 Moore Hall • www.cm-life.com